This.
When I started work in a govt dept in the 80's everyone was on 90-days probation when they started. Be a good employee, the employer will be good to you. Do what's required, you get to stay. Yeah, there are some arsehole employers. Employers don't want to keep on sacking dead sh*t people & replacing them. It cost the company time & money to employ & train decent new/replacement staff.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/oddstuff/4044940/Sickie-employee-busted-on-TV
Wongo2010-08-21 20:34:36
The Ruf, The Ruf, The Ruf is on Fire!!
Proof please. What do you know that we don't? Care to share?
Owned a business and, I think it would be fair to say, was a very fair and considerate employer. Like all employers I had the unfortunate experience of having to deal with staff who could not meet the requirements of the job. Yes we tried to train and develop them but to no avail. Previously terminating staff who did not / could not perform was nigh on impossible (without a grievance following) unless you literally caught them with their fingers in the till - which we unfortunately did on more than one occasion.
Proof please. What do you know that we don't? Care to share?
Owned a business and, I think it would be fair to say, was a very fair and considerate employer. Like all employers I had the unfortunate experience of having to deal with staff who could not meet the requirements of the job. Yes we tried to train and develop them but to no avail. Previously terminating staff who did not / could not perform was nigh on impossible (without a grievance following) unless you literally caught them with their fingers in the till - which we unfortunately did on more than one occasion.
I�also�wonder how the�Union would feel if the employers they are going to name and shame went public with the reasons staff had been let go ?
It appears that there has not been too much abuse of the law. And if employers really abuse it, then by all means let the world know about such behaviour.
Far better to work that way than have some over-prescribed legal-based adversarial type system. I prefer to have some faith in human nature and decency. We might just surprise ourselves.
I know, I know, its serious!
But that was apparently part of her problem - she asked for what she was contractually entitled to, (At least this is my understanding) but the place was quite often busy, so she was expected to 'help out' and 'pitch in' when busy. Fine if it happens now and then, but if its occouring constantly then they were understaffed and its the managers problem.
Also, I don't buy that it was that hard to dismiss incompetent people under the old law. Yes you couldn't do it instantly, but is it really that hard to give underperforming staff 1) warning they are underperforming 2) extra training/a chance to correct their underperformance.
Yes, the law required some effort on behalf of management, and imposes some costs, but I don't beleive that is a huge sacrifice when compared against the possibility of bad employers exploiting their employees. I've worked for good managers who have done this, and never had any issues with labour disputes, because they deal in GOOD FAITH with their employees, even underperforming ones.
I don't think good faith is to much to ask, and that certainly wasn't shown in the BF example, or in the cry for extending no-cause needed dismissal.
Saying things like employers would be stupid to abuse the 90-day law is kind of moot. Most people defending the girl are commenting on the specific case.
Saying things like employers would be stupid to abuse the 90-day law is kind of moot. Most people defending the girl are commenting on the specific case.
Saying things like employers would be stupid to abuse the 90-day law is kind of moot. Most people defending the girl are commenting on the specific case.
Saying things like employers would be stupid to abuse the 90-day law is kind of moot. Most people defending the girl are commenting on the specific case.
think the 90 day probation period is a great idea for employers - it gives them a fair and reasonable opportunity to establish if a new staff member can meet the requirements of the job and a simple termination process if they can't.
Mohammed, on the left, I'm still in touch with. He's now living in Agadez, Niger. More focused on his animals now as tourism has dried up. Is active with a co-op promoting local goods, leather work and bijouterie, into Europe.
20/5/20
Mohammed, on the left, I'm still in touch with. He's now living in Agadez, Niger. More focused on his animals now as tourism has dried up. Is active with a co-op promoting local goods, leather work and bijouterie, into Europe.
20/5/20
think the 90 day probation period is a great idea for employers - it gives them a fair and reasonable opportunity to establish if a new staff member can meet the requirements of the job and a simple termination process if they can't.
Bacon Backfire
Not the Bastard then?
I know, I know, its serious!
Bacon Backfire
Not the Bastard then?
Incredible stamina. No shame. Yellow Fever.
I would love to say a lot more, but I feel if I do I may be jeopardizing my political neutrality status. Even more so considering I have worked on this issue during the year.
I would love to say a lot more, but I feel if I do I may be jeopardizing my political neutrality status. Even more so considering I have worked on this issue during the year.

Mohammed, on the left, I'm still in touch with. He's now living in Agadez, Niger. More focused on his animals now as tourism has dried up. Is active with a co-op promoting local goods, leather work and bijouterie, into Europe.
20/5/20
Three for me, and two for them.
It took the manager 89 days to work out that this woman couldn't flip burgers.
Did her acting skills let her down on day 89?
Queenslander 3x a year.
The law is fair as long as it is not abused.
The law is fair as long as it is not abused.
www.kiwifromthecouch.blogspot.com
Chook Royale is my fav.
Three for me, and two for them.
Three for me, and two for them.
