Is this "Legal"?
Roberta
75 Posts
The agency posted a vacant position as a Grade 4 (+/- $9.00) hourly position. No college was required. The position was posted for the mandatory three days (in-house). The position was not advertised except for a few college job websites as well as our own website. A temporary employee with a Master's Degree was filling in for the previous employee (Associates Degree) while the previous employee was on FML. Previous employee did not return from leave. The temporary employee applied for the job and was hired full-time. So far, not much to complain about. However, the employee was hired as a Grade 7 salaried position. A current employee was told that the position paid at a Grade 4 and would not change. Is there any legal challenge here? I am asking for the employee who was told not expect anything beyond the Grade 4 rate.
I told her I didn't think there was anything "illegal" about it, but I am certainly not the expert. You are. Any thoughts are appreciated.
I told her I didn't think there was anything "illegal" about it, but I am certainly not the expert. You are. Any thoughts are appreciated.
Comments
If so, the best place to address the disparate pay issue is with the central human resource agency responsible for admintering the salary/compensation reugulations or the board or commission that oversees personnel actions, such as a civil service commission (depending on what authority it has in reviewing compensation and classification issues). There may be particular provisions in the authorizing legisltion of the agency's personnel practices that allow this. Or there may not be.
If they come from the company internal policy, there is probably no illegality. The company is not even required to post. It could have just filled a job with the incumbant employee (who was probably the most qualified anyway since he was actually performing the job).
Good Luck!