Hi folks. I've had some great advice from here in the past.
Unfortunately I am back for more, if there is any knowledgeable person about in the field of Employment, HR or Payroll I think.
Back story.
My partner and I work for an emergency service here in the UK. (Not sure if which one makes a difference)
In 2017 we had our first child and my partner went off having been on a full time wage. Following Maternity she came back and went part time. During maternity there were a few issues about her not getting the correct payments and having to chase people for BACS transfers to resolve. No massive issues.
Roll on 2020 we have child no2 and she returns after maternity in Feb 2021 to a new PT role. Pretty much as soon as she went back she got a maternity overpayment bill of approximately £1200 which was paid back over the next 8-10 months or so.
In September 2021 she moved to a new role. She remains in this role.Between the February - September she had a time in service pay increase, and September public sector pay rise and her new role attracts unsocial hours payments.
Roll on today an email drops into her email box from a payroll officer. Stating
"I'm writing to inform you of a recent change that was made to the contractual hours on your record which has resulted in a severe overpayment" (We have sought clarity on what this means)
The email goes on to say the figure is over £4000 which needs to be paid back as soon as practicable.
"the best option I have available to you so that we can recoup, without the need to create an invoice is as follows" (No idea what the significance of an invoice is)
"To deduct the overpayment from your record over a maximum of 16months at a cost of £260ish per month starting from March"
Followed by I'm sure its a bit of shock type text and contact me to discuss any concerns.
Signed off with words to the effect of can you please respond ASAP otherwise I will look to set up the recovery without your prior authorisation.
**I want to say that if this is all correct we have no issue paying her money back, it's public money**
However this is going to cause us significant hardship.
We have had no evidence of workings out etc.
This is the second time the organisation has got it wrong in relation to her pay.
Our question is here.
Where do we stand with this organisations inability to get it correct?
Can we challenge the amount to pay it back should this be found correct?
My partner is beside herself with worry which has been caused by our employer again.
Do we have any legal standing regarding these errors?
We are completely lost at the moment and pending some contact coming back from payroll, we don't know where to turn.
Any help or advice would be much appreciated. Even if its not the news we want to hear. We would rather know what is happening is correct.
Thank you in advance
N
Unfortunately I am back for more, if there is any knowledgeable person about in the field of Employment, HR or Payroll I think.
Back story.
My partner and I work for an emergency service here in the UK. (Not sure if which one makes a difference)
In 2017 we had our first child and my partner went off having been on a full time wage. Following Maternity she came back and went part time. During maternity there were a few issues about her not getting the correct payments and having to chase people for BACS transfers to resolve. No massive issues.
Roll on 2020 we have child no2 and she returns after maternity in Feb 2021 to a new PT role. Pretty much as soon as she went back she got a maternity overpayment bill of approximately £1200 which was paid back over the next 8-10 months or so.
In September 2021 she moved to a new role. She remains in this role.Between the February - September she had a time in service pay increase, and September public sector pay rise and her new role attracts unsocial hours payments.
Roll on today an email drops into her email box from a payroll officer. Stating
"I'm writing to inform you of a recent change that was made to the contractual hours on your record which has resulted in a severe overpayment" (We have sought clarity on what this means)
The email goes on to say the figure is over £4000 which needs to be paid back as soon as practicable.
"the best option I have available to you so that we can recoup, without the need to create an invoice is as follows" (No idea what the significance of an invoice is)
"To deduct the overpayment from your record over a maximum of 16months at a cost of £260ish per month starting from March"
Followed by I'm sure its a bit of shock type text and contact me to discuss any concerns.
Signed off with words to the effect of can you please respond ASAP otherwise I will look to set up the recovery without your prior authorisation.
**I want to say that if this is all correct we have no issue paying her money back, it's public money**
However this is going to cause us significant hardship.
We have had no evidence of workings out etc.
This is the second time the organisation has got it wrong in relation to her pay.
Our question is here.
Where do we stand with this organisations inability to get it correct?
Can we challenge the amount to pay it back should this be found correct?
My partner is beside herself with worry which has been caused by our employer again.
Do we have any legal standing regarding these errors?
We are completely lost at the moment and pending some contact coming back from payroll, we don't know where to turn.
Any help or advice would be much appreciated. Even if its not the news we want to hear. We would rather know what is happening is correct.
Thank you in advance
N
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