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Take sick leave, you're injured
I have taken all reasonable precautions and worked within the advice given from OH and my line manager. Ie not working with the heaviest and most awkward patients, not doing stuff on my own but with a partner, taking the lightest tasks when working with a partner leaving them the heavy tasks ( something that does not sit well with me when working with a woman half my size)
As OH have said I am fit for light duties I really cannot go off sick again unless something changes. I am fit for light duties indeed in most jobs even in nursing it would not be an issue
I have also kept management updated and have a paper trail to show this.
they gave me two hours photocopying a day to do and left me sat on my own in an office with nothing to do the rest of the time
That sounds like my ideal job
Good luck tj
Are you a qualified nurse or nursing assistant?
I think this is the bigger issue for you. If you are a qualified then getting bank shifts if you retire is not an issue because there are loads of agencies out there who would take on a qualified at 60 yrs old. Also agencies pay more than the bank too.
However, if you are only a nursing assistant, then your options may indeed be limited.
The whole thing is somewhat upsetting – looks like my career is going to fizzle out like a dud banger.
Ah TJ, that's the way all our careers end, not with a bang but a whimper...
Get out while you can; I'd be retiring asap if I were you, I've just done it.
I don't see the problem.
Finding light duties for you to do is not your problem it's up to the organisation-though not agreeing to travel more than 5 miles is not realistic in this day and age without good reason ie caring responsibilities or other health issues.
If they can't find any light duties (which if you're in a large organisation like the NHS and you really want to work then you could fight it and probably win) then they are obliged to offer you severance with compensation and/or finish you on the grounds of ill health which in most cases involves enhancing your pension.
TBF if you are anything like you are at work as you are on here then they will be glad to see the back of you whatever it costs.
#PrayforSTWforumifTJgetsthechop
If I was your employer I would be insisting on the light duties 5 miles away. Unless you have a really good excuse (e.g. your a carer) then that's 'reasonable'. It's a bus ride away. For one year you could manage it.
If I was you I would be asking for options to get out early. You've served your time, your issue is your pension being paid up. Just ask them.
On pensions - you only get your contributions made up if you are no longer able to do ANY job. If you retire on grounds of ill health because you cannot do your USUAL job you do not get contributions made up - you only get the pension now that you would at 60 hence the difference is worth around £750 a year pension to me if I go now on grounds of health not able to do my usual job
Mooman - I am an RGN but agency work pays less than bank work ( often a lot less) and is usually shifts in crap nursing homes not shifts in good NHS units. NHS lothian does not use agencies hence I want to keep bank options open if possible. Night shift in NHS unit is over £200 a shift, in care homes for agencies around £120
Looks like the consensus is I will need to be flexible about distance to alternative posts ( although there is one possibility even closer to my house) I shall use that as something I will compromise on to show goodwill so come in with - " a longer commute will be difficult for me" and end up with "Thats something I can consider - will I get the usual relocation deal" ( paid time for commuting) to " that seems a reasonable alternative"
Crikey - well done you. I cannot wait
Time to be put out to the nursing pasture that is opd and clinics?
We had a HCA who couldn't work due to skin problems. Couldn't wash hands or use hand gel constantly. Now a ward clerk. Just slotted her in.
Also had one with back problems and we found her a job as an ecg lady in the cardiology dept. Win for her.
Never seen someones career ended for needing adjustments in my trust. People have always been given different jobs. Be it opd or discharge lounge etc etc.
I guess agency/NHS pay is different in Scotland then. My wife is a qualified nurse and earns considerably more than the NHS equivalent working for an agency; significantly more than the £200 for a 12hr night shift.
Thats my expectation that they try find me that sort of post. I could make it very difficult for them to do so if I wanted tho ie how much extra commuting is reasonable? How big an alteration to my hours is reasonable?
Band 5 tho not 2
Mooman in Scotland the NHS very rarely uses agencies thus the agencies are fighting for care home shifts with a race to the bottom on pay.
in Scotland the NHS very rarely uses agencies
There are agency midwifes at my wife's work, on circa £50-60 an hour and they travel up from that london town to work. Told my wife to get in touch with agency to offer her services
I've read this thread in full and can really sympathise with you. I hope the injury heals fully, and remember you want it to heal up properly so you can enjoy that retirement rather than always looking back and wishing you had let it mend.
If I were in your shoes, I would take whatever light duties they give to you, however mind numbingly boring, and put up with it for a year then retire. If I were your manager I'd be really uncomfortable with you not taking up a relocation only a few miles further away, especially as it's only for a year. As you say, I dont see how you could go on further sick leave if light duties have been offered that are suitable for allowing your injuries to heal, as refusal to take them on if fit to do so is almost just refusing to work.
A difficult situation for sure, but for what it's worth, I'd ride it out for a year even if it's a bit more distance to work and the work is boring. Plenty people who already do that anyway, probably your manager included, but they dont get to sack it off after a year.
I hope it works out in your favour Tj
At the moment I spend 30 mins a week commutting ( 45 when full time)- going to 8 hour days and going to say Liberton where I used to work but left at least in part because the commute was too long I would be spending 4 hours a week commuting on part time and 6 hrs full time - would that be reasonable / suitable? I cycle to work and that is very important to me.
Thanks very much chaps tho - the advice / discussion has been very helpful in helping me formulate my line to take at the meeting. appearing to be flexible etc. Part of me is looking forward to it. I enjoy tying managers and HR in knots - surprise surprise 🙂
I shall use that as something I will compromise on to show goodwill so come in with – ” a longer commute will be difficult for me”
Jesus, coming out with that over a few miles will have them itching to bag you.
6 hrs commuting in a week for a full time job is less than many people I suspect. Remember that how you get to work is not your employers concern. Doesn’t sound unreasonable to me though, commuting within same city etc.
If I was you I’d be looking for a compromise that would facilitate an exit, esp as a fellow shoulder injury sufferer. Worth also bearing in mind that while you may take some delight in tying managers in knots, try and not get their backs up, as that is only going to make them less flexible on a compromise.
mashr - 6 hours rather than 45 mins commute a week?
Iainc - its often the way to a good deal to show them that they have not followed procedure and / or not been reasonable. Often they try to browbeat people into giving up their rights. I will take charge of the meeting and agenda, lay out my case, be polite and then show reasonableness by then offering concessions / compromises.
Depends to a great extent how good the HR rep is - my line manager is a classic dunning Kruger ( she thinks she knows it all, she does not) and the senior manager is anything for a quiet life and is very weak
^^^ fair do’s, and good luck tomorrow, fingers crossed for a good outcome.
tjagain
Member
NHS lothian does not use agencies hence I want to keep bank options open if possible.
One of is is ill informed then.
HEALTH bosses in Lothian are paying agencies £1,715 for one nurse for one shift.
Occasionally in very specialised areas Mooman. Very rare indeed in lothian. NOne ever on general wards or other areas where I have the skills to work
.
Thats a classic scotsman publications SNP bashing story with a grain of truth made into a huge pile of poop.
Do NHS Scotland have good counselling services?
Your HR person is going to need them....
Anyway hope the shoulder heals soon
TJ
What your commute is now is largely irrelevant(though not for you obvs) but what they offer you has to be within reasonable travelling time.6 hours commute a week is not unreasonable,in fact most folk would love a commute of that time-36 minutes each way!IIRC in the civil service you would be expected to accept a post with an hour each way commute and would have to argue your case for refusing anything above.
As for going off sick ,it may not be an option.Your GP if they're doing their job properly would/should/ and probably already has in the past completed the fit note saying fit for some duties but not heavy lifting/your usual job which puts it back in the hands of the employer to find a suitable post.
To echo others be open and receptive and certainly don't go full on TJ !!
ta again
this to me is when I find STW very useful. Certainly not an echo chamber, a wide range of experiences and no hesitation in calling out folk for being unrealistic
this really has helped me a lot even those sods who don't agree with me! 😉
Best of luck, hope it goes well.
Lolz@ tinas. Maybe I should take a troll or two for “emotional support”
Well I have nothing on tomorrow if you want me to come in and lay the stink* eye on them.
(rather literally at the moment, I hope you have a strong stomach or a bad sense of smell).
In all seriousness though as others have said 6 hours is reasonable enough, I could expect to do that if I cycled every day. People would give their left nut (or appropriate appendage) for a commute that short never mind what you do now. I know you make a big thing of it and how important it is to you but this is one of those times where you need to back off and look at the bigger picture (retirement and what that allows you to do). Play the game and string it out as long as you have to, you don't sound like someone that they would want to sack anyway.
If it looked like they were going to retire you on health would resigning be an option? Pretty sure you can still do bank and pay into pension can you not?
Whatever happens though good luck!
5 miles sounds like perfect commute distance by bike. Far enough to get warmed up but not so far as it'll kill you off your recreational riding. I'd say your current arrangements are 'very' convenient by most people's standards. I know this didn't happen by accident but you've been quite fortunate nevertheless I'd say. A longer commute when you're better could be very good for you too.
Either way, I hope you fully recover, and this situation works out for you.
My 2p’s worth, why not.
Re the commute: your 1 mile now is ideal, but it would be totally unreasonable to not give somewhat on this, especially if only for a few months. It will take longer, but the 5 miles you suggest, gives you WGH (~3miles) and RIE (~5 miles). There must be loads of roles at those two hospitals that you could do whilst you recover fully. As for being a bit bored, well I would say tough - you cannot reasonably expect the perfect job, with the light duties you require.
Less realistically:
- could you ‘act up’ where you are, to a more senior role? - you know the sort, where they swan around and never lift a finger?
- could you take a 3 month sabbatical, take a long holiday travelling, heal, come back and do another year where you are till retirement?
As for being a bit bored, well I would say tough – you cannot reasonably expect the perfect job, with the light duties you require.
I too struggled with that... Being bored sitting there or photocopying isn't their preference, you're the one who's injured, they're doing you the favour....
I can't see how he's got much reason to complain in honesty.
Have you had your meeting yet? How did it go??
Well, if he isnt posting he still has a job 🙂
On my way now
You've taken the shotgun yeah ?
Live Stream it
Not fully up to speed so don't know if this has been covered.
Do you have transferable skills recognised outside the UK?
If so I would gtf out to somewhere warm and sunny where I would be appreciated.
Are CQC hiring?
I am sure your current employer would be overjoyed to see you again as an assessor.
I will keep an eye on Edinburgh Evening News twitter feed - just in case! But seriously we are all keen to find out how this works out.
Do you have transferable skills recognised outside the UK?
If so I would gtf out to somewhere warm and sunny where I would be appreciated.
Given that he cant do his job (the reason for the meeting) I'm not sure this will get far
It would be ironic in the extreme if TJ got transferred somewhere too far away to cycle that wasn't served by convenient public transport.
He'd have to.........buy a car.
How did it go?
Your thinking on this seems very inflexible. Is that something you struggle with in general?
Its only a year, whatever happens. That is nothing. Loads of options.
Boring but light duties - suck it up and count down the clock till your shoulder all heals up, retire at 60 and keep your bank shifts option open.
Take a couple of months sick pay to get fully healed up - you can go off sick if there aren't any actual light duties - then return and count down till retire and keep your bank shifts option open.
Temp transfer transfer - so what if it is 5 miles away? Jesus Christ you are making a right song and dance about the 'commute'. And as above, it is only a year!
He’d have to………buy a car.
Yeah, right.
Go the whole hog:- retire, get a van, start up a dog walking business.
ha ha ha, you lot are terrible.
Maybe he could start a one man crash helmet advocacy workshop?
Your thinking on this seems very inflexible. Is that something you struggle with in general?
Are you new here? 😉
😂😂😂👏🏻
#Pray4TheHRrep
Completely useless meeting. Nothing decided apart from we are going to have a case conference involving occupational health in a few weeks
I'll post more later. Back on duty once the taxi gets me there.
Completely useless meeting
Not so. It's allowed you to burn through a few more weeks of your remaining time.
A few more delays like this'll get you over the line.
Member
Completely useless meeting. Nothing decided apart from we are going to have a case conference involving occupational health in a few weeks
ach, see those HR folk are never any use at taking charge of the meeting and agenda, shoulda done that bit yerself...oh, hang on... 🙂
I will take charge of the meeting and agenda, lay out my case, be polite and then show reasonableness by then offering concessions / compromises.
I've seen a few guys over the years who were big personalities in their workplaces end their careers on a bit of a whimper, not quite get the big send off and cries of what will we do when you leave?...
It's always a bit sad, one guy in particular was a gem of a man, hardest working and most pleasant guy I've had the pleasure of, took a turn and fell from height meaning he gradually drifted into retirement, no fanfare, nothing.
I think this is a fear for lots of folk, as if retirement doesn't present enough worries as it is...
Anyway, it's understandable if you're feeling that way too Jezza, just do whats right for you, but also the outcome needs to be something that doesn't cause you any more stress or anger.
Best of luck.
I'm not sure that the NHS has to care about your commute.
I currently have a 10-15 min walk to work. When the merger eventually goes through that we've been threatened with the last few years, my commute will be an hour each way by car, so I will also have to incur the cost of buying and running a second car. But that is of no interest to my employer. I either go there or don't, they don't care.
Back on duty once the taxi gets me there.
How can you continue to work there? As you say, the job entails duties you are not capable of doing at present. You are relying on other staff doing the ‘heavy work’ for you. I know what that is like, a nurse’s job can be far more physically demanding than anyone unfamiliar with the day to day activities would realise (it really does depend what type of ward you’re on). Unless they made you supernumerary and you really did just do the light duties for a few months - but from experience I cannot see that happening.
I’m not sure that the NHS has to care about your commute.
I think this might be to win an argument when TJ insisted everyone can live near their job...
Sounds like a miserable situation TJ hope you get it resolved!
Buy a car and get commuting. Cars are great. 😉
I’m not sure that the NHS has to care about your commute.
They do. How much depends on the employment contract.
I currently have a 10-15 min walk to work. When the merger eventually goes through that we’ve been threatened with the last few years, my commute will be an hour each way by car, so I will also have to incur the cost of buying and running a second car. But that is of no interest to my employer. I either go there or don’t, they don’t care.
Previous employer went through a merger, shut down our office ~15 miles away and moved us into a place that happened to be much closer to my home.
Those in team who previously could just fall out of their front door and into the old office whinged, and effectively got given commuting expenses for a year of "transition"... When I pointed out I had effectively been doing the same journey in reverse without any cover for commuting expenses for several years I was politely ignored. But yeah, some employers will actually cover some of the costs incurred if they end up compelling an employee to work further away*...
(*and then probably revise some of the fine print in their company policies)
Sounds like you attended a standard sickness review meeting TJ and now being followed up by another with OH advice, again pretty standard stuff.
When I pointed out I had effectively been doing the same journey in reverse without any cover for commuting expenses for several years I was politely ignored
How hard did they laugh at you?
When I pointed out I had effectively been doing the same journey in reverse without any cover for commuting expenses for several years I was politely ignored
The difference is, you knew and agreed to those conditions when you took the job. Those who have been forcibly relocated did not. Some sort of transitionary relocation bonus seems fair in this situation.
This happened to us just over a year ago, our office relocated some 10 miles away. It made not a jot of difference to me as I live broadly equidistant from both, I'd just have a similar commute in a different direction. But there were loads of people going "but I walk to work!" and suchlike. HR ended up doing things like starting a car-sharing incentive, looking at working from home for some people, basically dealing with individuals on a case-by-case basis. A few people still left but we at least tried to offer support.
At the risk of teaching you to suck eggs TJ, try to step back a little and be more objective if you can. We do invest a fair amount of emotional capital in the job we do and this can sometimes be a negative in situations like this, especially towards the later stages of our careers.
Essentially, you care more about this than everyone else and it can colour your interactions in a negative way. Given that you are so close to being able to retire and with only a small financial penalty, look to the longer term, plan an exit and make sure you don't burn any bridges.
Be more Elsa; let it go.
Be more Elsa; let it go.
Elsa couldn’t let it go.
Despite the knights warning she crossed the Great Seal and paid the price.
Be more Indy
They probably hope youll resign or just not come back, you cant do the work required, others you work with will feel youre not capable of doing the job they do and putting extra work on them, and putting pressure on mangement , despite what they tell you.
Either leave or take up the job move.
Don't know about NHS but teaching in Scotland has some "rules" about being relocated. They usually offer travel expenses for a couple of years.
I'm with tj on the travel. If you've specifically taken a post or moved house to give a short commute then if you're to be moved by employer that should be taken into account (maybe that's a positive for public services).
Here you go TJ. I've found a job for you.
https://www.countryside-jobs.com/job/jan20/access-officer-scotways-0701-6
Health & safety is everyone’s responsibility - time to stop going to work
I’ve found a job for you.
No salary it seems.
I can't help you with HR, but I can tell you that I too tore my rotator cuff and I also have a physical job. Lots of crawling around, bending, lifting etc. A steroid injection had little effect, but then I went to see my wife's consultant (she's a sonographer) and he gave me three guided injections with ultrasound right into the dodgy bits. I watched the whole thing on the screen. It looked like belly pork. This was Friday. Saturday, my arm was in absolute agony. Sunday, it was like a new arm. Its been fine for two years now, I only get the odd twinge now and again. Sometimes it aches if I've had a long day on the bike for example. Might help you with your recovery if you've not already had such a thing. Good luck!
It's your choice to cycle to work and the employer is under no obligation to take that into account if they choose to offer alternative employment at a different location.
All employers I have worked for would regard a daily commute of 1 hour each way as reasonable.
I haven't looked at the legalities of what constitutes an offer of reasonable alternative employment but would be amazed if 5 miles e/w could be considered 'unreasonable'.
Does your employment contract have a specific clause which clearly covers what constitutes a 'reasonable' commute?
No salary it seems.
Remuneration: £12,360 per annum.
All employers I have worked for would regard a daily commute of 1 hour each way as reasonable.
I haven’t looked at the legalities of what constitutes an offer of reasonable alternative employment but would be amazed if 5 miles e/w could be considered ‘unreasonable’.
Does your employment contract have a specific clause which clearly covers what constitutes a ‘reasonable’ commute?
Reasnoble is open to interpretation.
The government guidance has the example of being asked to move abroad at 1 days notice!
Really it comes down to the role not the company, a senior manager on a six/seven figure sallary might be expected to relocate to another town, city or even country. Someone stacking shelves at a supermarket on the other hand you wouldnt expected to move stores.
I’ve seen a few guys over the years who were big personalities in their workplaces end their careers on a bit of a whimper, not quite get the big send off and cries of what will we do when you leave?…
I would have thought that would be the norm, very, very few people are irreplaceable, everyone else leaves and within a couple of months pretty much no one remembers what they did, the work just gets done by others.
Someone stacking shelves at a supermarket on the other hand you wouldnt expected to move stores.
When I worked in a supermarket stacking shelves in my teens I was occasionally required to work in other stores. I got bus fare.
When I worked in a supermarket stacking shelves in my teens I was occasionally required to work in other stores. I got bus fare.
Difference between an extra shift and being offered a job in a different town to avoid having to pay redundancy. They could (and i think they would have to if it was an option) of course offer it, but couldnt force it. I.e. its move or redundancy, not move or quit/be fired. Then its a tribunal to test if the employer was being reasnoble.
tinas - I think you're wrong and I stand by my earlier post.
Who is referring to working in a different town?
I'm sure TJ will be along soon to comment.
Have you come across the test of reasonableness?
In an employment context being asked to commute 5 miles each way (shock!) is eminently reasonable.
Hi guys - a few things to say
firstly I have been listening to what many of you have said about the commuting. Seems what I thought "reasonable" may well not be as as understood by the man on the clapham omnibus - or in this case the stw forum! I have taken that on board
I like my job and I am good at it. But I am done. 40 years of it and I really have very little more to give. This is obviously colouring my attitudes. I just can no longer cope well with being buggered about by poor management.
As to the meeting today? I suspect that in the pre meeting they had they actually changed what they intended to happen. Clearly they were taken aback when I pointed out that under the policies redeployment is not appropriate. " what about my budget" my line manager said and looked a little perturbed when I told her that is not my problem! I very much doubt they are used to folk who actually read and understand policies and who treat senior management as equals in discussion.
This meeting should have been 4 months ago when I first asked for it. " but we had no concrete information to act on " I was told - again pointing out there still is no concrete information left a bit of a silence.
I was very gentle with what I said - lots of "maybes" and "perhaps" and "with hindsight" but I was also very clear and firm and it was very interesting that they did not challenge me at all when told that in my reading of the policy, redeployment rather than a temporary relocation was not appropriate. I think they now realise they cannot push me in a direction I do not want to go. The senior manager has never seen this side of me before and my line manager looked quite uncomfortable at being challenged by me then not backed up by HR in her insistence redeployment was the right way to go when I said the policy clearly does not say this.
I am really quite angry that they sprung a report from the moving and handling folk at me that draws conclusions they are simply not able to make. I thought I was having a discussion and getting some advice a while back with the moving and handling folk not that they would be writing a formal report. Tomorrow I will be insisting that all the reports from the various professionals are given to me in full and unredacted form. I will then critique them.
Next step for them is this "case conference" with the same players as today plus the occupational health physician. Next step from me is to involve my health and safety rep and union and I am going to hammer them on this. I believe I am being put at risk by their attitudes and if I am injured again at work whilst working withing the guidelines given they will be in big shit.
I will also be very interested to see the minutes from today - I expect they will have to be corrected. I took my own notes. I also summed up at the end ( gently with a " ok - just to be clear its this, this and this from you and my position is this and next steps are this".)
I really do not know how this is going to pan out now. They clearly are very reluctant to offer me a temporary relocation ( buggers up their budgets). My line manager even said she had a shoulder injury from 8 years ago that still gives her pain. correct you silly mare - you never went and had a proper diagnosis or treatment and did no physio ( as she previously told me) and that I would have to accept a shoulder that would never be 100%. Well all the professionals I have seen have said I will make a full recovery in time. Its how long he timescale is that is the question.
I am very angry that we are no further forward. I will have to think long and hard about what I do next but the health and safety rep is going to be involved and I am likely to take a much tougher line in future - I can always compromise back from that hard line.
Just to add a layer of complication it looks like my other half is also going to be leaving her work under sickness - and she is in a very different place to me.
I have a few days before I am back at work to think things thru and may well be back here to bounce more things off you. It really had been very helpful to have had this discussion. ta folk.
I would have thought that would be the norm, very, very few people are irreplaceable, everyone else leaves and within a couple of months pretty much no one remembers what they did, the work just gets done by others
Aye, you're making the same point as me, though I'd go a little further, no one is irreplaceable.
I do not care about a big send off and "what will we do when you leave" I am just disappointed and upset that its looking like what is in the grand scheme of things a fairly minor injury is looking like its going to end my time at work. I am disgusted at the weakness of my senior manager who is leaving me hanging in limbo. I do not deal well with this sort of uncertainty. 50 shades of grey? My arse. There is only black and white! 🙂
” what about my budget” my line manager said and looked a little perturbed when I told her that is not my problem!
Beautiful, perfectly correct and exactly what I would have said.
The senior manager has never seen this side of me before
Clearly doesn't have an STW account. (-:
I believe I am being put at risk by their attitudes and if I am injured again at work whilst working withing the guidelines given they will be in big shit.
Pretty much what I alluded to a couple of pages back. They're playing with fire here.
I would have to accept a shoulder that would never be 100%
phrased differently, your job will leave you with a permanent 'disability'? (inverted commas because it might not technically be a disability particularly under new regs, but you know what i mean)
Is that not inviting some sort of claim?
You're right that their budget concerns are not yours.
Did you give them a deadline to produce their version of meeting minutes/notes? If not, give them a deadline - and make it a tight one.
As soon as you receive their version, send them yours and invite them to confirm, within a tight response deadline, that yours is an accurate, complete and true statement of the meeting. State that failure to respond within your deadline will be taken as confirmation that your version is accurate and complete.
I recall you did not have anyone in attendance on your side today; that would have been helpful in corroboration of your notes.
You have been a union rep but this time ensure the union represent you fully; you're the 'plaintiff', not the rep.
H&S representation at next meeting is good.
Get the most senior representation possible from the union; take their advice about drawing NHS trust senior management into this - assess possible downside.
Will the union put forward an employment law specialist on your behalf?
HR's only function is to protect employer's interests; in their view, employees are an irrelevance.
Be very clear about what you want from this and ensure your representatives are in no doubt about this. What is your optimal resolution? That is your starting point.
What is your optimal resolution? That is your starting point.
As I said at the meeting there are no good solutions that I can see. Relocation to an area with much less manual handling with no time limit on how long that is is probably the best but one that I really do not wish to take. the other would be early retirement with enhanced benefits ie pension contributions made up - but that is highly unlikely. Pension decisions are not made by the employer but by the pensions agency
I hope something can be resolved for you TJ.