Seniority from 1991???
njjel
1,235 Posts
An employee worked for us for 8 years until 1991 when she resigned and returned to work for us in 1996. She is now requesting that her first round of employment count toward her seniority. We have no policy that addresses this. She is now in management but was not when she left in 1991. I'm inclined to say that because she was gone over one year her previous time does not get added to her current time. How do you handle this at your work place?
Comments
If you don't have a policy that addresses this, you need to get one in place immediately. IMHO a 5 year break is too long to even consider restoring seniority.
Good luck!
"When a past employee is rehired, we will give them credit for all years (to include previous years) of employment when calculating their years of service with the Company."
The retirement and 401K plans have their own policies according to the SPD.
Our policy is that if an ee is layed-off due to a lack work, they return to work with no loss of seniority. Everyone else who is out for 6 months or more, comes back as a new employee and is told so at the time of rehire.
I know many "larger" companies who have defined benefits will give prior employees credit if their break is less than 5 years.
We assign an "Adjusted Hire Date" for ANYONE who had been previously employed with us. (I just did one for someone who was employed from 1969-78 that we just rehired.) I find that this is a great way to re-employ some good employees. Basically this date is used to calculate their vacation time. (I don't know of anything else that uses this date for calculations.)
E Wart