Hi
I work for a company that has a sales force who are locally based but travel nationally for sales meetings
The company has brought in a policy that states travel to meetings should be done in their own time, not during working hours.
If the have a meeting where they really need to leave the office early the previous day, the earliest they may leave is 4pm.
To give an example, one rep had a 9am meeting in Aberdeen. He was permitted to leave the office only at 4pm the previous day. It's a 7 hour drive from us to Aberdeen, so he would arrive at his hotel around midnight (assuming he didnt stop for something to eat or a rest break). He would then be up and out in the morning to arrive at his meeting at 9am.
They are contracted to work 37.5 hours per week. There is a clause in the contract that states 'you may be required to work overtime as dictated by the needs of the business' but despite that, I am not sure if this policy is legal
I want to advise the Partners that this wrong but would like some legal perspective to come from.
Any help would be hugely appreciated
I work for a company that has a sales force who are locally based but travel nationally for sales meetings
The company has brought in a policy that states travel to meetings should be done in their own time, not during working hours.
If the have a meeting where they really need to leave the office early the previous day, the earliest they may leave is 4pm.
To give an example, one rep had a 9am meeting in Aberdeen. He was permitted to leave the office only at 4pm the previous day. It's a 7 hour drive from us to Aberdeen, so he would arrive at his hotel around midnight (assuming he didnt stop for something to eat or a rest break). He would then be up and out in the morning to arrive at his meeting at 9am.
They are contracted to work 37.5 hours per week. There is a clause in the contract that states 'you may be required to work overtime as dictated by the needs of the business' but despite that, I am not sure if this policy is legal
I want to advise the Partners that this wrong but would like some legal perspective to come from.
Any help would be hugely appreciated
Comment