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Reply to: Are the client/agent taking the micky?
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Previously on "Are the client/agent taking the micky?"
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostYou've missed the GAS part out of my quote.
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Originally posted by Illustrious View PostYou mean now I've put you right on the assumption you made that I'm obliged to work on site?
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If he's not going to sign it, he's not going to sign it. Sure, going in gives him one less reason to not sign it but I'm thinking he'll be a funny bugger anyway. So then I've cancelled Christmas plans with the family and I'm out a trip to Manchester too.
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Originally posted by Illustrious View PostYou mean now I've put you right on the assumption you made that I'm obliged to work on site?
I'll let you work the rest out
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostYes there does. We thought you were a professional contractor and that you think we GAS at this point
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Originally posted by Illustrious View PostThere seems to be confusion here.
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There seems to be confusion here. I think possibly when I said the "normal office" is the one I'm expected to go to. I meant that was the office I'd only ever been to; Manchester wasn't a new location I was being asked to visit. My contract makes no specific mention of where or how the services I provide are to be provided. Not one clause or paragraph in the contract states that I have to be "on-site" at the client co to provide services, nor does it even have the clients office address on any of the pages. It merely states that they expect 8 hours of effort from me each day, for which I log time on their system with corresponding evidence of commits to the repository or other documentation. It was the agent who said I was contracted to work "on-site" and this was only after he called me with a prompt from the Director of Operations because I refused to work for free last night.
Second, I was always taking Friday off before I got canned. They know this. The project is being handed off to the client, today, for the purposes of testing. As of tomorrow, there is no work to be done; phase 1 of the project is complete. The request from the DoO is punitive. Not to mention this is a guy who, from the get go, has been aggrieved that the Technical Director and PM were happy for me to work from home. The technical director, (nice guy), has been on holiday since Monday and isn't available to put this tool right.
As for the weather, rain doesn't really bother me. But when they've given the weather a name, Storm Barbara, and are issuing warnings to expect severe flooding, structural damage and severe delays in the North West then I start to take a bit more notice. The M62 is a vile motorway in only mildly bad weather; I personally am not prepared to take a risk that I'll be stranded, injured or killed - and every weekend I see at least 3 major accidents on that road without a bloody named storm blowing.
He might refuse to sign my time sheet for not coming in, but since there is no obligation on my part to work in the office I don't see how they could refuse on that basis. They can't argue that they're unhappy with the work since I have countless emails saying "good work" and "great idea" and "thanks". Not to mention correspondence asking me to work, for free, to help them out.
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Originally posted by psychocandy View PostGot to be fair NLUK has a point here. Surely if you take a gig in location A you've got to expect that client is at some point going to expect you to turn up at location A? Yes you may WFH at some point but I dont see it as a right unless its in the contract.
To be honest, I'd be very surprised if any client ever let me work last two days WFH. Didnt we have a guy on here recently where they refused to pay him? I think I'd rather be in plain sight so theres no argument then.
And this thing about traffic and bad weather. Jeez. If you don't want to go in, then dont, but then they're not going to pay you.
Admit it NLUK - someone who moans more than me?
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Originally posted by Illustrious View PostManchester Airport is miles from the office and if you've ever seen the traffic in Manchester I'd hope you'd appreciate the dilemma. I stayed in Chorlton one week to cut back on the costs and it took me over an hour to commute into the office. The hotels relatively close to work are far more expensive.
and chorlton is about 25 minutes on the tram to piccadilly
Do you expect to take a contract in a different city and maintain sub 10 minute commutes?Last edited by pr1; 22 December 2016, 09:17.
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Originally posted by Illustrious View PostWho wants to sit in traffic for over an hour on a morning? No one. If they have me good notice to come in and stay over I'd have been able to get a cheaper hotel. I'm not spending a chunk of my rate to stop over at short notice especially now they've canned me.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostYou valley boys wear coats nowadays? Tsk tsk. world's gone mad.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostYes you have. It's the one you land inbetween working for these pesky clients and I'm sure you'll find it again sometime soon.
Still worth it to go to work sadly.
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Originally posted by psychocandy View PostAdmit it NLUK - someone who moans more than me?
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