ritika_chadha
Suppose a contractual employee has joined his duties w.e.f. 15 July 2010 and he has taken leave on 6 August 2010 due to some work will his leave be treated as casual leave or LWOP. Regards Ritika
From India, Delhi
suyoglabourconsultants
11

Dear Ritika,
Basically, ur information is short, whether ur unit is factory or establishment' if it is factory, employee is not entitled for earned leave as it will be worked out after completing 240 days of service,
if it is establishment under shops & comm.establishment act and governed by the state govt. then what provisions for leave in ur State be checked. but remember one thing what policy in respect of leave has been adopted by ur organization is important.There is no provision of casual leave in factory act as well shops & comm. establishment act. so, the leave may be treated as leave without pay.
regards,
KIRAN KALE

From India, Kolhapur
vineetsaini19
8

Dear Ritika,
Kindly speak to the HR department regarding your leave details. many organizations do give some leaves for he contractual employees as well. The number and type of leave may vary from a confirmed or on-roll employee.
We cant help you with the correct answer whether you will be marked LWP or not.

From India, Chandigarh
snjv.nair
1

Hi
Casual employee for sesonal establishment or were job is for few days only no leave applicable. Were as if regular casual employee attain the factory then they are eligialbe for leave as per leave policy applicable to regular employees.
Or company can discuss with the contractor and come to agreement regarding leave policy. Or standing order can be passed as per standing order act regarding leave system for causal employees.
For all this min 240 days working is required in a year.
sanjeev

From India
avijit
HI
I agree with my friends that it totally depends on the organization, there is no fixed rule. But as per leave policy followed by most of the org it is that any contract employee is eligible for 1 paid leave every month of work. It can be taken as CL or SL.

From India, Bangalore
ajay8587
1

Hi
It is usually based on Organizational Policy.
It is not affected by the matter that when you have joined, if there is a provision for Casual Leave with contractual employee, then it will be paid.
Better check HR Manual that is given to almost all the employee at the time of joining, there such leave policy will be mentioned.

From India, Delhi
pbskumar2006
590

Dear Ritika ji,
In most of the MNCs they are providing contractual type of appointment for example the Turnkey projects they are providing these jobs for the respective organisations they are having a leave rules procedure may be. In that case the contractual employment the employee may get CL or EL or Paid Leave etc. But its purely depending upon their administrative procedure. Weather the employee is elegible or not will be decided if the rules made there in.
If the contract of employment is attracted by the Contract Labour (R&A) Act it will not be.
Regards,
PBS KUMAR

From India, Kakinada
Vasant Nair
90

Please appreciate a simple fact that employees engaged through a Contractor or employees engaged on a Contractual basis are entitled to all applicable benefits under various Labour Laws just as they (Labour Laws) are applicable to regular employees.
Therefore, to say that grant of leave to contractual employees is a matter of policy or choice of the management would be erronous.
In the query under consideration, the employee should be given one day's CL.
Best Wishes,
Vasant Nair

From India, Mumbai
azamirfan
In fact labour laws are framed for the regular emplyees/workers
whereas the contract employees cannot be ruled by those laws.
The employee may be treated under the contract of worked served to
him when he joined .
Azam irfan

From Pakistan, Lahore
kumaresank
18

whether employee is hired/engaged on contract or regularly or as a trainee, in humanitarian grounds, should grant them minmum days of leaves for the days they served the organization.......
From India, Tiruchchirappalli
Community Support and Knowledge-base on business, career and organisational prospects and issues - Register and Log In to CiteHR and post your query, download formats and be part of a fostered community of professionals.





Contact Us Privacy Policy Disclaimer Terms Of Service

All rights reserved @ 2024 CiteHR ®

All Copyright And Trademarks in Posts Held By Respective Owners.