Working hours question...

Anyone got a source, everything i found online reads as guidelines

https://www.gov.uk/rest-breaks-work/overview

Using this law:
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:32003L0088&from=EN

Article 3

Daily rest

Member States shall take the measures necessary to ensure that every worker is entitled to a minimum daily rest period of 11 consecutive hours per 24-hour period.

yes?? when did you last work for a supermarket?? i have raised the issue before, because i think it sucks, like i said above, and when you look into it, you will see that 11hrs is just guidlines

No, it's the law.

Also, your supermarket sucks, it's poorly managed, that doesn't mean they are all like that.
 
yes?? when did you last work for a supermarket?? i have raised the issue before, because i think it sucks, like i said above, and when you look into it, you will see that 11hrs is just guidlines

It's a legal entitlement depending on your job

https://www.gov.uk/rest-breaks-work/overview

There's a more detailed web page somewhere but I cba looking , possibly on the HSE website
 
Your employer can enforce the 11 hour break as their own policy, but the 11 consecutive hours break is not a rule.
 
Pretty sure plenty of people in audit won't be getting their 11(or 8?) hours during busy season. When I was at PwC policy was if the client was >90minute commute then you would stay in a hotel. One of the jobs in my office apparently was only a 10-20 minute commute but everyone was put in a hotel as it was deemed too dangerous for them to drive home with the ridiculous hours they were working.
 
so all i can see in the link is guidelines, difference between "have the right to" and "Must have"
 
In general the Working Time Regulations provide rights to:

a limit of an average 48 hours a week on the hours a worker can be required to work, though individuals may choose to work longer by "opting out"
5.6 weeks' paid leave a year
11 consecutive hours' rest in any 24-hour period
a 20-minute rest break if the working day is longer than six hours
one day off each week
a limit on the normal working hours of night workers to an average eight hours in any 24-hour period, and an entitlement for night workers to receive regular health assessments.

These are not "guidelines" they are rights you have, and any employer that doesn't provide these can end up at a tribunal.
 
Your employer can enforce the 11 hour break as their own policy, but the 11 consecutive hours break is not a rule.

No, it's law. There are exceptions though.

Pretty sure plenty of people in audit won't be getting their 11(or 8?) hours during busy season. When I was at PwC policy was if the client was >90minute commute then you would stay in a hotel. One of the jobs in my office apparently was only a 10-20 minute commute but everyone was put in a hotel as it was deemed too dangerous for them to drive home with the ridiculous hours they were working.

Well commuting isn't working so that doesn't count.
 
im going to tell my personal manger, im taking them to a tribunal tomorrow just for giggles
 
The 11 hour rest period is contained in The Working Time Regulations 1998.

Daily rest

10. (1) An adult worker is entitled to a rest period of not less than eleven consecutive hours in each 24-hour period during which he works for his employer.

(2) Subject to paragraph (3), a young worker is entitled to a rest period of not less than twelve consecutive hours in each 24-hour period during which he works for his employer.

(3) The minimum rest period provided for in paragraph (2) may be interrupted in the case of activities involving periods of work that are split up over the day or of short duration.

It's not compulsory, it's an entitlement.

Some employers will make it compulsory on the basis that they have a duty of care to their employees which means that they should take all steps which are reasonably possible to ensure their health, safety and wellbeing.

If you wanted to work 16 hours a day, 7 seven days a week then in theory you could but your employer wouldn't permit it as they would be in breach of their duty of care.
 
i do love the bit where he says there are exceptions,, so that translated means they are guidelines!
 
i do love the bit where he says there are exceptions,, so that translated means they are guidelines!

Are you deliberately being obtuse?

It's pretty simple to understand and has already been explained many times in this thread, read one of the links and it explains which roles are excepted
 
What is law?

The law is the law. As pointed out above, it's not guidelines.

i do love the bit where he says there are exceptions,, so that translated means they are guidelines!

If that's the case then there is no law, just guidelines. Killing someone isn't illegal, just against guidelines...

It's not law, it's an option open to the employee that the employer must honour if the employee chooses to enforce it.

Yeah, and that's there because of law.
 
i do love the bit where he says there are exceptions,, so that translated means they are guidelines!

There are exceptions (statutory defences) to many laws such as possession of a bladed article in a public place. That doesn't mean it's a guideline though.
 
Oh FFS!! :rolleyes:

https://www.gov.uk/rest-breaks-work said:
Daily rest

Workers have the right to 11 hours rest between working days (eg if you finish work at 8pm, they shouldn’t start work again until 7am the next day).

Note "Workers have the right" not "Must have" therefore is NOT law, however an employer can enforce any government guideline they see fit on an employee is accordance with their duty of care
 
The law is the law. As pointed out above, it's not guidelines

What law? The law is that an employee is entitled to an 11 hr break ,there is no law that says an employer must force an employee to have this much of a rest period
 
The law is the law. As pointed out above, it's not guidelines.



If that's the case then there is no law, just guidelines. Killing someone isn't illegal, just against guidelines...



Yeah, and that's there because of law.

Are you trying to argue that murder and the working time directive are the same thing? The employee holds the cards, the employer has a duty of care. That's it.
 
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