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Do I have to work a bank holiday?

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A local expert from Citizen’s Advice provides timely tips on consumer issues.

Q: “ I recently started a new job which I enjoy, but my boss has told me I’ll have to work on bank holidays. This was never the case in my old job. Can my employer really make me work on a public holiday, and should I get paid extra if I do?”

A: Congratulations on the new job and wonderful to hear you’re enjoying the work. Unfortunately, when it comes to bank holidays, whether or not staff have to work is up to their employer, and you don’t have to be paid more if you do.
The situation will vary from job to job and may depend on a number of factors such as whether your place of work is open on bank holidays, your hours of work and – crucially – what your contract says.
Take a look at your contract, if you have one, to find out what your personal situation is. Your contract might say you will always get bank holidays off, you may sometimes be required to work them or it might say you will always be required to work.
If your place of work is normally open on a bank holiday, you’ll probably be asked to work at least some of them. But if your contract says you get bank holidays off you shouldn’t be asked to work.
Your contract might say something like: “In addition to bank and public holidays, your annual entitlement to holidays is X days” – this means you get public holidays off in addition to your annual leave entitlement – but it might not mean you’re entitled to take the specific days off. You may be required to work a bank holiday, in which case you should get another day off instead. Alternatively, it might say something like: “Your annual holiday entitlement (inclusive of bank and public holidays) is X days” – this means you have to take bank holidays off as part of your annual leave entitlement. Bank holidays will either be deducted from your annual leave allowance (so you’ll have to book all bank holidays as paid time off) or they will be counted as additional holiday days.

Bank holiday pay
A common misunderstanding around bank holidays is that employers have to pay you extra for working them. This is not the case. Unless your contract says you’ll be paid extra, you will just be paid your normal amount. If your contract says you are entitled to bank holidays off but you’re asked to work, you should be able to take a different day off in lieu. Your employer has to follow what’s set out in your contract. If they don’t, you should raise this with them.
If you don’t have a contract, the legal default position is that your employer can tell you when you can or can’t take time off.
If you’d like to request a bank holiday off, use the normal method for requesting time off. If you find you need to resolve an issue with your employer, first ask for an informal chat, where you can raise your concerns.
If this doesn’t get you anywhere, you may need to raise a formal grievance – if you need help or advice on this contact your local Citizens Advice.

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Graduate Assistant (Prep School or Senior School) | Clayesmore School

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To commence September 2023

Enthusiastic and committed Graduate Assistants are required for our Prep School and Senior School on a one year contract.  These exciting opportunities include a full and active role in the pupils’ games programme, supporting the work of teachers in the classroom, and pastoral care of our boarders.

These positions would suit enthusiastic sports candidates who may be recent graduates and may be considering a career in teaching to learn more about the profession, or for someone seeking a short-term post prior to embarking on another career path.  These are live-in positions that will involve some evening and weekend work within the boarding house.

For further information and an application form, please go to:

https://www.clayesmore.com/work-for-us/

Clayesmore is committed to the safeguarding and promotion of children’s and young people’s welfare and expects all staff and volunteers to share this commitment.www.clayesmore.com

Science Technician (Physics) | Clayesmore School

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Permanent, Part Time

To commence September 2023

An enthusiastic person is required from September 2023 to provide the skills and expertise to support teaching and learning within the Physics department.

Your duties will include preparing for practical work, advising and supervising pupils, and ordering, storing and maintaining stock materials and equipment.  You will have a knowledge of Health and Safety within a Science environment and be able to carry out regular safety checks and risk assessments.

This post is part time, 16 hours per week, term time only. A competitive salary and attractive benefits are provided for the successful candidate.

Further details and an application form are available from:

https://www.clayesmore.com/work-for-us/

Applications will be considered as soon as they are received and so the deadline may close earlier if we find the right candidate, therefore early applications are advised.

Clayesmore is committed to the safeguarding and promotion of children’s and young people’s welfare and expects all staff and volunteers to share in this commitment.

www.clayesmore.com

Digital Content Creator | Clayesmore School

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Full-time, all year round

Commence September 2023

We have an exciting opportunity for a Digital Content Creator to join Clayesmore.

You will work in conjunction with academic and support staff, bringing your brilliant digital skills and knowledge to create exciting content that will inspire new parents to consider Clayesmore, build commitment and loyalty amongst our existing parent body, and support the overall growth strategy and future development of the school.

Clayesmore School is located in the village of Iwerne Minster in the shadow of the Iron Age Fort of Hambledon Hill. The breath-taking scenery isn’t really what makes working at Clayesmore a joy. What really makes the school standout is the warmth of the people and the culture and kindness that underpins everything we do.

Benefits include 30 days annual leave (plus 8 bank holidays) per annum, a non-contributory pension scheme, death in service benefits, a free meal each day and free membership of the Clayesmore sports facilities.

Please feel free to ring the HR department on 01747 813213 if you would like to discuss this role. Further information can be found on our website:

https://www.clayesmore.com/work-for-us/

Closing date: Friday, 30 June 2023 at 8.00am

Clayesmore is committed to the safeguarding and promotion of children’s and young people’s welfare and expects all staff and volunteers to share in the commitment.

www.clayesmore.com

The Bootleg Shadows | The Exchange Sturminster Newton

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8th July 7.30pm

Tickets £20
Call the box office 01258 475137 or book online here https://bit.ly/bootlegBV

In the company of Geoff, Keith, Tony, Tim and Binks the audience is taken on a tour of the Shadows career, with plenty of humour to make it a night out to remember. For anyone who loves the sounds of the 60’s and enjoys a few laughs on the way – Bootleg Shadows perform a unique tribute that has audiences humming the tunes and doing the Shadows famous ‘walk’ long after they have left the theatre.

BOOK NOW!

Jazz for a Summer’s Evening | Sherborne School

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Wednesday 28th June – 7.30pm, Music School, Sherborne School

The Swing Band and Junior Jazz Ensemble perform in an open-air concert featuring music by Charlie
Mingus, Glenn Miller, Ella Fitzgerald, Cole Porter and Frank Sinatra.

Tickets £20.00 (to include a finger buffet and a glass of wine)

Scan the OR code in the advert or emal [email protected]

Battle of the Organs | Sherborne School

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Featuring the Chamber Choir

Sherborne School Chapel – Tuesday 27th lune at 7:30pm

The Chamber Choir is joined by pupil organists, featuring the School’s two instruments.
With organ music by Langlais, Barstow and JS Bach

FREE ADMISSION ALL WELCOME

Scan the OR code in the advert to book or email [email protected]

It’s time to wake up and see the flood

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Social media is brilliant for keeping in touch with family and friends … but it’s also a fertile medium for the spread of disinformation. Studies have shown that false information spreads faster and further than accurate information, and is also more likely to attract attention.
With an average profit of £1.5m every minute for the last 50yrs, the fossil fuel industry has been well able to spread its climate change disinformation campaign and buy all the influence needed to successfully delay political interference that might limit its activities. Governments and regulators around the world have effectively been captured, which explains the International Monetary Fund’s calculation that the industry benefits from subsidies of around £9m per minute*. In part this is through not having to pay for the deaths and damage caused by air pollution, heatwaves and other impacts of global warming.

Four days of protests
Another, more subtle, form of media manipulation is to starve issues of the ‘oxygen of publicity’, as Margaret Thatcher described it.
On 22nd April I joined The Big One demonstrations in London, with a huge number of people who all spent the time and expense to travel to Westminster to express their growing alarm at the disastrous inadequacy of government action on the environment. It was great to see so many people of all ages and ethnicities, including families with young children, coming together peacefully to express the growing public disquiet at our politicians’ failure to safeguard our collective future.
Before the event, the media frothed with a totally bogus story about the London marathon being disrupted. It wasn’t – but in the end, the four days of demonstrations created minimal media publicity. Nothing to see here folks.
Climate change will affect us all, one way or another.
Cornwall and Devon still have hosepipe bans introduced last summer. Here in North Dorset a few intense storms this winter caused flooding instead of compensating for the long periods without any rain at all.
At a recent Dorset Council planning consultation meeting, I was pleased to see the seriousness with which the environment is now being taken – but we are still not taking sufficient action anything like quickly enough.
We simply cannot afford to ignore the urgency of the situation.
Ken Huggins,
North Dorset Green Party
*Oil sector’s ‘staggering’ $3bn-a-day profits
**Fossil fuel subsidies of $11m a minute

Tivoli Theatre’s Charlie North-Lewis selects his Dorset Island Discs | BV Podcast

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You can’t interview Charlie North-Lewis without a steady stream of name-dropping; his long and winding career is a musical tour through 40 years of popular culture.

Charlie was working at BAFTA in 2002 when he decided it was time to go back to his professional roots after long years managing major international band tours, and he began looking for a theatre job.
‘I just happened to see the advert. It said: “Tivoli Theatre in Wimborne, Dorset, is looking for a general manager.” I’m sure it said something along the lines of ‘knowledge of the area useful’ or helpful or something. And I just thought, well, I went to school in Dorset. That’ll do …’

This month the Tivoli’s theatre manager sat down with Tracie Beardsley to choose his Dorset Island Discs – highlights are in the May issue of The BV magazine here, but in this extended edition of the BV podcast you can listen to the unedited full conversation, with all the bits we had to chop out!

You can listen to all Charlie’s music choices in his Dorset Island Discs playlist here

(Apologies for any background sounds – Charlie and Tracie met at the Crown Hotel in Blandford!)