Minimum Wage Consultation Document
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Minimum Wage Consultation DocumentExpand / Collapse
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Posted 02 November 2007
 

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: 17 January 2008
Posts: 7, Visits: 8
Can anybody let me know who pays people £3.50 per hour? - spread the word that they can have a job with me for £3.75!
Post #633
Posted 05 November 2007
 

Group: Administrators
Last Login: 24 September 2008
Posts: 127, Visits: 118
Some info from Jersey Acas -

Minimum Wage

Guidance note 3 to the EMPLOYMENT (JERSEY) LAW 2003       

This statement is intended to explain to employers and employees the principal requirements of the Law. It is not intended to cover all the requirements of the Law, nor does it represent a statement of the Law. Any reference to male persons in the statement should be read as including, or being, female persons where this is appropriate.

Minimum Wage (part 4 Articles 16 to 43)

1. A minimum wage comprises a minimum hourly wage irrespective of a person’s employment, gender or racial group and is payable to an employee providing that he is above compulsory school age, the rate to be determined by the States from time to time. 
(The minimum wage is £5.24 per hour from April 1st 2006 and £5.40 from April 1st 2007. The proposed wage for April 1st 2008 is £5.80)
 
2. A trainee rate may also be specified from time to time. This rate can apply for a maximum period of 1 year for new employees on accredited training programmes, approved in writing by the Employment and Social Security Committee, irrespective of their age. Please see the relevant  Code of Practice . 

(Agreed as £3.94 per hour from April 1st 2006 and £4.05 from April 1st 2007. The proposed wage for April 1st 2008 is £4.35).
 
3. A charge for a minimum standard of accommodation or accommodation and food can be "set off"against the Minimum Wage, the level of such charge to be determined from to time.  No other form of benefit (e.g. utilities bills) can be taken into account in determining whether the Minimum Wage has been satisfied. 
"Food" is defined as 3 adequate meals on each day on which the employee is employed. Employers may not off set a proportionate amount of pay for less than 3 meals per day and a charge for food may not be off set unless accomodation is also provided. "Accommodation" must be available to the employee from midnight to midnight on each day of employment.
 
(Maximum off set for accommodation and food - £76.43 per week from April 1st 2006 and £78.80 from April 1st 2007. The proposed offset for April 1st 2008 is £84.63) Maximum off set for accommodation only - £57.32 per week from April 1st 2006 and £59.10 from April 1st 2007. The proposed offset for April 1st 2008 is £63.47). 
 
4. An employer is obliged to maintain certain records, including a record of the employee’s actual and contractual (paid) hours, in the form of a single document for each pay period (e.g. weekly), sufficient to establish that the employer is paying a rate at least equal to the minimum wage, for a period of 10 years. Records may be kept on computer.
 
On or before each pay date, an employee must be given a written itemised pay statement (Article 51 of the Law has been amended so as to require that " An employee must be given by his or her employer, at or before the time at which any payment of wages is made to the employee, a written itemised pay statement.")
 
An employee has a right, if he has reasonable grounds to believe that he has not received the wage, following reasonable notice to the employer in writing, to inspect and to copy such records that relate to his own employment. This right may be exercised by the employee on his own or accompanied by another e.g. a colleague, friend or other person.
 
5. If the employer does not allow access to records within 14 days of receiving a written request (or a later time mutually agreed between employer and employee), then within the next 13 weeks the employee may lodge a complaint with the Tribunal.
 
If the Tribunal upholds the complaint then it may instruct the employer to pay the employee a sum not exceeding 80 times the current minimum hourly wage.
 
6. If an employee has been paid less than the minimum wage then in addition to the sum outlined in 5 above, he will be entitled to be paid the difference between the wage received and the minimum wage for the period that the claim referred to.  

Enforcement notice

7. An employer who fails to comply with the minimum wage provisions may be served with an enforcement notice by a government official requiring that the law be complied with. An employer may appeal to the Tribunal against an enforcement notice within 4 weeks of the date on which it was served.

If an enforcement notice is not complied with then the employer may be served with a penalty notice (twice the minimum wage in respect of each employee, for each day of non-compliance) and may be sued for any sums due to the employee(s) in the Civil Court.

8. An employee has the right not to be subjected to any detrimental act (or inaction) by his employer because the employee took any action to secure any benefit due to him under the minimum wage provisions. If an employee believes that he has suffered detriment then he may lodge a complaint with the Tribunal within 8 weeks from the date of the alleged action (or inaction). The employer must show the grounds on which any act (or inaction) was done in order to defend himself against the complaint. 

If the Tribunal upholds the complaint then it may make an award to be paid by the employer to the complainant at a level that it believes to be just and equitable in all the circumstances, subject to an upper limit to be determined from time to time.

9. An employer who wilfully neglects or refuses to pay an eligible employee the minimum wage or who fails to keep the records required is liable to a fine up to £5,000 (applies equally to any other person whose act or default results in this offence).
 
An employer who makes false records (or allows them to be made) or allows any record or information that he knows to be false to be produced is liable to a fine or to imprisonment for up to 12 months, or both.
 
These penalties apply equally to any person who aids, abets, counsels or procures an offence.
 
10.  Certain "special classes of person" may not be covered by the minimum wage provisions e.g. those not covered include: mariners employed wholly outside the Island or not ordinarily resident in the Island; share fishermen; charities, voluntary orgnisations or statutory bodies; prisoners (except those undertaking work outside the prison under a rehabilitation programme, who must be paid the minimum wage); residential members of religious and other communities.
Post #661
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