That's my understanding too.AFAIK your terms and conditions don't change because you are pregnant.
Any use?AFAIK the employer has to provide a healthy and safe place to work.
Pregnant employees
An employer should carry out separate risk assessments in relation to pregnant employees. If there are particular risks to an employee's pregnancy, these should be either removed or the employee moved away from them. If neither of these options is possible, the employee should be given health and safety leave from work, which may continue up the beginning of maternity leave. If a doctor certifies that night work would be unsuitable for a pregnant employee, the employee must be given alternative work or health and safety leave.
Following an employee's return to work after maternity leave, if there is any risk to the employee because she has recently given birth or is breastfeeding, it should be removed. If this is not possible, the employee should be moved to alternative work. If it is not possible for the employee to be assigned alternative work, she should be given health and safety leave. If night work is certified by a doctor as being unsuitable after the birth, alternative work should be provided. If alternative work cannot be provided, the employee should be given health and safety leave.
During health and safety leave, employers must pay employees their normal wages for the first three weeks, after which Health and Safety Benefit may be paid - see below. Time spent on health and safety leave is treated as though the employee has been in employment, and this time can be used to accumulate annual leave entitlement. The employee is entitled to leave for any public holidays that occur during health and safety leave.
See here.There is law on the issue Pregnant employees regulations 2000. so if you feel upset then you should read up on these and know your rights.
AFAIK the employer has to provide a healthy and safe place to work.
no... apparently the boss doesn't want prospective customers to see the staff sitting down..... Can she take a chair from the canteen?
Its a small shop, with 4 people max working on any given day, so the manager definitely knows the story.thanks Clubman.
Just to add. most large stores have supervisors and SME have managers who may not be so aware of these laws and when it is introduced to them (in a non-confrontational way of course) are more than happy to comply. I suggest your girlfriend meets with the boss or supervisor and sets out her stall so to speak. An ounce of honey and all that. But the doctors note will always carry weight - she is fit to work, but with work tasks revised as appropriate.
Wasn't aware of anything specific but this might help.
[broken link removed]
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no... apparently the boss doesn't want prospective customers to see the staff sitting down.
IMO. That puts a completely different light on it. Its not something that haven't done yet. But something they have no intention of doing ever.
Not according to the CitizensInformation link that I posted above.I know is she takes either health and safety leave ... they wont pay her.
The employer is not breaking the law by not providing a chair AFAIK. a chair was never there to begin with and an employer may argue that it is not suitable (not enough space for example). If the employee cannot do the job without modifications to the workspace then i would say she may fall into the "not fit for work" which she was hired to do. Hense she should take a softly softly assertive approach before informing HSA etc.from reading this post your wife is able to carry out her duties, she is just looking for a chair while she does so. in this case the employer is breaking the law
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