Offer letter
mbeam
258 Posts
We had an employee receive their first paycheck and then inquire about the benefit deductions taken.
When the offer letter was given to them it stated their hourly wage plus the fact they would be eligible for full benefits (versus partial since they were a full-time employee). The welcome packet also included a benefit summary which lists the cost of the benefits.
The employee interpreted the term "full benefits" to mean that they would pay nothing for their benefits.
On the day the individual started, the HR Manager went through the benefit offering with them on a one-on-one basis and no questions were raised at that time.
We've been using this letter for a couple of years and haven't yet had this come up.
We're looking for advice on what others include in their letters and whether we should look to change ours.
Thanks in advance for your help!
When the offer letter was given to them it stated their hourly wage plus the fact they would be eligible for full benefits (versus partial since they were a full-time employee). The welcome packet also included a benefit summary which lists the cost of the benefits.
The employee interpreted the term "full benefits" to mean that they would pay nothing for their benefits.
On the day the individual started, the HR Manager went through the benefit offering with them on a one-on-one basis and no questions were raised at that time.
We've been using this letter for a couple of years and haven't yet had this come up.
We're looking for advice on what others include in their letters and whether we should look to change ours.
Thanks in advance for your help!
Comments
You may want to think about adding this to the offer letter to avoid such problems in the future.
I briefly describe our benefits to employees interviewing for jobs here, including what portion of insurance premiums they'd be responsible for; but I don't go through all the details until their new employee orientation meeting, unless they request it.
I would caution against putting too much in your offer letters. If your offer letter states what %age of insurance premiums are paid by EEs, and you later change (read "increase") the %age, you may have some EEs trying to claim that the offer letter represented a "contract" as to what %age they would have to pay.
We make clear in our Personnel Policy Manual, and in our Summary of EE Benefits (which we update yearly) what EE's share of premiums will be. In my opinion this is more than sufficient. I think you just had an unusual situation with this 1 individual. If this is the 1st time the question has come up in 2 yrs, I take that as an indication that probably nothing is "broken" in the way you've been handling this up to now.