Originally posted by d000hg
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Have been offered an NHS role but offered an extension in current private sector role
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They should stand by their morals and stop employing contractors, then its no longer a problem. Its not as if they are getting superior skill sets given most public sector projects are complete failures anyway. Might as well employee mr permie on £35k and fail, than expensive contractor no tax paid on £100k and still fail. -
If it was worded like that, then it probably wouldn't be legal.Originally posted by d000hg View PostBut how can a contract stipulate what tax is payable? Is that a legal clause - if unfair notice periods, etc, are not then this seems even more 1-sided.
But it's not - they are inserting clauses which enable them to enquire as to the tax/NI structure you are using. If you resist/refuse, or they don't like what they see, then they will just cancel the contract using whatever cancellation clause is in the contract anyway.
So to flip your question around - why wouldn't that be legal.Comment
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...which is none of their business.Originally posted by centurian View PostIf it was worded like that, then it probably wouldn't be legal.
But it's not - they are inserting clauses which enable them to enquire as to the tax/NI structure you are using.
What clauses will come next? Clauses to ensure that you're not spending too much of your money on drink or drugs? To ensure that you don't spend any of it on call girls?Contracting: more of the money, less of the sh1tComment
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But that doesn't make it illegal.Originally posted by kingcook View Post...which is none of their business.
Remember they can cancel your contract for virtually any reason - that's the whole point of why they take on contractors. They can cancel your contract because they don't like the colour of your shoes, so they can certainly cancel your contract because they are not satisfied with assurances of your tax structures.
Think about it - how could you have any regress. You can't take them to an industrial tribunal. You can only sue them as a B2B entity for breach of contract - but if the contract says they can unconditionally issue cancellation notice whenever they like - they are not in breach of any clauses.Comment
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This chap seems to think the guidelines won't apply to the NHS
<snip?
Although...
Translation: Our opinion that the guideliness won't apply the NHS is pure wishful thinking, because if it does apply, we're screwed.We only supply the NHS, no one elseComment
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to be honest that is the view I get from my agent, who also specialises in suplying the NHS. He got his accountant to give me a call and what I got was that he can't see it happening in the next 10 to 15 years. I view that as wishful thinking.Originally posted by centurian View PostTranslation: Our opinion that the guideliness won't apply the NHS is pure wishful thinking, because if it does apply, we're screwed.Comment
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I've already blown out an agent emailing me for an NHS contract - they are desperately trying to reassure contractors with a bag of smoke and a box of mirrors."I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
- Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...Comment
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A B2B contract might allow all kinds of crazy things but they don't view us as real businesses, and an employment contract CAN'T be unfair to the employee.Originally posted by centurian View PostBut that doesn't make it illegal.
Remember they can cancel your contract for virtually any reason - that's the whole point of why they take on contractors. They can cancel your contract because they don't like the colour of your shoes, so they can certainly cancel your contract because they are not satisfied with assurances of your tax structures.
Think about it - how could you have any regress. You can't take them to an industrial tribunal. You can only sue them as a B2B entity for breach of contract - but if the contract says they can unconditionally issue cancellation notice whenever they like - they are not in breach of any clauses.
Even B2B, we don't live in an unregulated capitalist society where a company can stipulate anything it wants.Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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How they view us will be irrelevant. It's the contract that counts. If it is an employment contract (or you can argue that it is), then yes, there will be all sorts of safeguards. But then you will be completely and utterly slam dunk IR35-caught, which kind of defeats the object of opposing this change.Originally posted by d000hg View PostA B2B contract might allow all kinds of crazy things but they don't view us as real businesses, and an employment contract CAN'T be unfair to the employee.
Even B2B, we don't live in an unregulated capitalist society where a company can stipulate anything it wants.
B2B contracts have considerably more lattitude.
But even if a specific clause is deemed to be unenforeable - general contract law is that the other legal clauses still hold true. And if you have signed a contract where ClientCo has the right to cancel the contract by issuing a stated notice, then you have no legal recourse if they issue that notice correctly.
Here's how the conversation will go.
ClientCo: We want to inspect your accounts under clause 14 of the contract.
d000hg: I don't think that clause is legal. You can't force me to show my the accounts.
ClientCo: Mmmmm. We have checked and you are absolutely right. We cannot enforce clause 14.
ClientCo: (2 mins later) - Clause 15 allows us to terminate the contract with 4 weeks notice. We hereby invoke clause 15, effective today.
ClientCo: (2 mins after that) - Clause 16 means we don't have to provide you any work, or pay you. As of today, we have no work for you. Please close the door behind you.Comment
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Yes, until a gaggle of people take the issue to court and companies have to stop putting it in the contract.Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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