Day 117 - 27 Apr 95 - Page 08
1 paid?
2 A. Yes, it does, my Lord. The difference is with salaried
3 staff they have a minimum of a month's notice to give,
4 irrespective of their length of service.
5
6 Q. The contributory pension fund which they can join
7 voluntarily, that is salaried staff only?
8 A. That is salaried staff only.
9
10 Q. But the free life insurance and the medical care is?
11 A. It goes to both.
12
13 Q. Both, yes, I understand?
14 A. Under different conditions but it goes to both.
15
16 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Thank you, Mr. Rampton.
17
18 MR. RAMPTON: Can I just go on a slight digression? I need not
19 come back to it, Mr. Nicholson. If somebody wanted to
20 retire early on grounds of, let us say, ill-health, how
21 would that work? First of all, would they be entitled to
22 retire early on grounds of ill-health if they were hourly
23 paid, or is that something that only happens to salaried
24 people?
25 A. Well, if they are hourly paid, they simply leave work
26 by giving the correct amount of notice. If it was for
27 ill-health purposes, we would let them go immediately.
28
29 Q. What about a salaried person?
30 A. Salaried people can ask for retirement early on the
31 grounds of ill-health. They can ask to retire early under
32 any circumstances but they get a reduced pension.
33
34 Q. What would happen to their pension? Assuming it was an
35 authentic reason for early retirement, would they still be
36 entitled to their pension?
37 A. Most certainly.
38
39 Q. Ill-health?
40 A. If it was health ill-health, yes, they would be
41 entitled under the scheme to an ill-health pension.
42
43 Q. Coming back on course to hourly paid people, you said there
44 were educational schemes?
45 A. Yes.
46
47 Q. Can I ask you as a preliminary, have you any idea, roughly
48 speaking, what proportion of your crew, your hourly paid
49 staff, are students of one kind or another?
50 A. No, I do not have that statistic.
51
52 Q. Are we talking, do you think, about significant numbers?
53 A. Yes, we are -- substantial numbers.
54
55 Q. What does the Company provide for those people?
56 A. For anyone taking a recognised business course they are
57 awarded £50 toward the cost of their books. Then there is
58 an award of £250 given to each restaurant. Large
59 restaurants with large staff may get two or three of the
60 awards but, generally, it is one award to each restaurant,