pay slips

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7 Aug 2017
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by the tower the one up north ..
is it from this week that an employer must put all details on your pay slip ?
hrs wage holidays earned and taken ?
 
That’ll be handy, my payslips work in units which don’t really make sense! Usually get my calculator out each month and have to work out if I’ve been paid right or not:oneed to keep an eye on them! Caught them out a couple times.
 
More like the new law came in and someone went "crap, all these guys are salaried and we havent written down anywhere what their hours are to feed them thru to payroll". Also "crap, we better not put in what we think they should be doing in terms of hours cos half these clowns are doing extra hours without knowing it"

:)
 
They said it was to help resourcing but guessing it helps with this new law too.

If you have external clients or a charge out rate, it helps with the billing or justification of fees. My charge out rate before I retired was £80+ per hour, my salary was much less than that but include support staff, buildings, vehicles, pension etc. it adds up.
 
My charge out rate before I retired was £80+ per hour, my salary was much less than that but include support staff, buildings, vehicles, pension etc. it adds up.
Depending on your industry, that's really cheap. When I was on the road, over thirty years ago, if we had a chargeable call then the rate was £150 for the first hour and £100 for each additional hour.
 
Depending on your industry, that's really cheap. When I was on the road, over thirty years ago, if we had a chargeable call then the rate was £150 for the first hour and £100 for each additional hour.

Yes, but all my time was chargeable then so it was al least £640 per day at standard hours. The timesheet just decided who it was billed to.
 
When I was contracting I wouldn't get out of bed for less than £100 an hour, on a 4 hour minimum callout basis. This was plumbing and boiler maintenance mind, none of this PC lark. I got fed up with it rather quickly though and although I now earn quite a bit less, my quality of life has increased tenfold.

(this always irritates me with those contractors who go "I make £1000 a day", it's so easy to blurt out these numbers but what most folks don't realise is how much work is involved to get that job in the first place, and it'll only be for a few days at a time, you never know when the work is gonna dry up, you could be travelling all over the country, you need to juggle a million things at once, deal with crap customers phoning you up a month later going "it;s borked come fix pls" only to find that they hired some cheapo crap guy to do the work and screwed it all up, etc. Yes you can make that kind of money contracting but you'll have no life in most situations)
 
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