Does your contract make reference to payment upon receipt of signed timesheet or similar? If it does, then you've got your answer in terms of what is due to you.
If they've pulled *any* work that you were expecting then that doesn't go hand in hand with a zero-hour contract - they aren't obliged to give you any in a zero-hour contract; my daughter went four weeks without work in a part-time job so binned it off. If you've accepted a zero-hour contract, then you are accepting that there are potentially anywhere between 0 and 48 hours per week of work for you.
If they've pulled *any* work that you were expecting then that doesn't go hand in hand with a zero-hour contract - they aren't obliged to give you any in a zero-hour contract; my daughter went four weeks without work in a part-time job so binned it off. If you've accepted a zero-hour contract, then you are accepting that there are potentially anywhere between 0 and 48 hours per week of work for you.
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