Originally posted by Lance
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Previously on "Statutory Maternity Pay / Maternity allowance?"
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Originally posted by pr1 View PostWhat, up to 30k tax free lump sum? Nah course he didn't
*ducksfromfloodofnewthreadsaskingifitspossible*
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostHas she looked into sueing her employer for discrimination for making her redundant just because she is pregnant?
That said I don't think you meant you paid her redundancy pay did you?
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Has she looked into sueing her employer for discrimination for making her redundant just because she is pregnant?
That said I don't think you meant you paid her redundancy pay did you?Last edited by northernladuk; 4 January 2017, 10:40.
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Originally posted by Lance View PostApparently a very good job she did
If she does not meet the qualifying conditions for SMP, see if she qualifies for Maternity Allowance.
To claim this you go to a Jobcentre Plus.
Maternity Pay and Maternity Allowance are mutually exclusive, I think that's where you are going wrong.
Guide to Maternity Allowance here
https://www.gov.uk/government/upload...nteractive.pdf
I think the SMP1 form fails in your case as the employment has already ended, hence the type of option you are wanting to find on there, isn't covered by the form.
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Originally posted by Vegas View PostI was a contractor, working through a personal service company. The company employed my partner who assisted me in the performance of my functions. Earlier this year, I was offered a permanent position and took it. My partner was also pregnant and she was made redundant by my PSC soon after and the company is now dormant.
If she does not meet the qualifying conditions for SMP, see if she qualifies for Maternity Allowance.
To get MA:
you need to have been employed or self-employed for at least 26 of the 66 weeks before the expected week of childbirth, and
you can find 13 weeks (not necessarily in a row) in which you earned over £30 per week on average. You should choose the weeks in which you earned the most. You can add together earnings from more than one job. You can include employed and self-employed work.
You can also claim MA if your baby is due on or after 27 July 2014 and you are the spouse or civil partner of a self-employed person and you help in their business.
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Statutory Maternity Pay / Maternity allowance?
Vegas, you say your partner assisted you, but then you left the PSC. Was she made redundant, or was it because you left that there was no longer a role for her?
If the company is no longer trading, it cannot pay SMP, neither can it complete an SMP1 because it is no longer trading, and since you (and her) left prior to the birth, I would be surprised that she could claim it.
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Erm. Looks pretty much like its a no goer from that list. Not sure what else there is to do. Out of interest did you have a signed employment contract? I don't think many if anyone pay redundancy to partners I'm these situations do they?
I'd she's no longer employed by the company how can she claim maternity pay? Sounds odd that.
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Statutory Maternity Pay / Maternity allowance?
I was a contractor, working through a personal service company. The company employed my partner who assisted me in the performance of my functions. Earlier this year, I was offered a permanent position and took it. My partner was also pregnant and she was made redundant by my PSC soon after and the company is now dormant.
She has now had the baby and is about to put in the paperwork for SMP / MA however as she is no longer employed by the company (which is now not trading / dormant) the company can not pay SMP and is required to complete an SMP1 form however the reasons on the SMP1 form don't fit this.
They are:
- Employee not employed long enough
- Earnings not high enough
- You did not tell me soon enough that you will stop work to have your baby
- You did not give me medical evidence soon enough
- You did not tell me soon enough that your baby had been born
- You were in legal custody
- You have started work after the birth
Anyone else been in this position? What is the correct way to approach this?Tags: None
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