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therandom9
Joined: 10 May 2010
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Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 5:16 am Post subject: About to give school notice - unforeseen pay complications? |
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I am going to give my employer notice on Monday that I will be leaving, and I want to make sure that my ducks are correctly in a row before doing so.
-My contract says that if I give notice before payday (10th of each month), I can leave by the end of the month. I will give notice for middle of September, so this should be ok.
-the stickier bit is that my contract specifies that I am part-time, even though I am on an E-2 (negotiated this awhile ago). I get paid $X for each hour worked. I want to make sure that if there are any labor board disputes I can verify my hours worked easily. Currently the system in place is fairly lax (a sign-in sheet for myself and other part-time workers, mainly F-4 people). Any recommendations as to how you would lock this down and make sure the evidence is unambiguous? I also record these hours myself to have a backup.
-are there any possible issues with the labor board not recognizing a part-time E2 contract? Seems unlikely, just double-checking.
A labor board issue is quite possible, my ex-coworker had one that she won fairly easily when my boss tried to not pay after she quit, although she was full-time.
It is possible/likely that my employer will threaten a groundless lawsuit. Should I line up a lawyer, or is that unnecessary?
Thanks in advance for pointing out anything I haven't thought of here. |
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Troglodyte

Joined: 06 Dec 2009
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Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 6:30 am Post subject: |
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Let's lay out the facts here to get a better perspective of the situation:
- there's no real way to prove how many hours you work (and hence how much you're owed;
- the boss tried to swindle a previous teacher
- you get paid 10 days after the month worked
He's going to tried to cheat you as well. The signs are there.
The question is, do you want to take the time and effort to fight him when the time comes? Or do you just want to get paid for your time and leave?
Can you take a sick day? If so, then take Tuesday and Wednesday (maybe also Thursday) as sick days, come in for work on Thursday and Friday. Get paid on Friday. Fly out on the weekend or Monday. If you want to hang around in Korea for a bit longer, then just move into a youth hostel or minbak. On Monday inform immigration that you've quit and want a week or so in order to sort out your affairs before leaving.
There's nothing that your boss really can create a law suit around. No employee is obligated to work. You can quit with a moment's notice. Even if he CAN come up with something for a CIVIL law suit, there's no way that he'll get it set up before you're out of the country. It's not something that you can just call up the courts for and arrange in 5 minutes.
You don't need a lawyer. |
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luckylady
Joined: 30 Jan 2012 Location: u.s. of occupied territories
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Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 8:54 am Post subject: |
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honestly don't know anyone that has given notice they're leaving and it's gone well. |
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YTMND
Joined: 16 Jan 2012 Location: You're the man now dog!!
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Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 9:59 am Post subject: |
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luckylady wrote: |
honestly don't know anyone that has given notice they're leaving and it's gone well. |
I have worked out 3 in Korea without any problems. One of them worked out a 50/50 arrangement I work less, they pay less for the final month. Another agreed to 2 weeks to find another teacher. The third paid everything owed and gave me some time to find another school.
If you just spring it on them, they are going to be pissed. The 2 week one I mentioned threatened to report me to immigration at first, but then said they needed 2 weeks to find a replacement.
If you are working part-time, I would check you have enough money first. If not, give notice after pay day. Find a new school, and if the current school doesn't pay you can take legal action later if you are really owed it.
Good luck. |
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viciousdinosaur
Joined: 30 Apr 2012
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Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 2:26 pm Post subject: |
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The whole not-paying-people-who-quit thing extends to everyone in Korea, Koreans as well. Most Koreans never take it the labour board, which is why employers keep doing it.
I see this situation as pretty straight forward
1) You are leaving Korea for good: Just take your last pay and fly out the next day
2) You are staying: follow their guidelines for quitting as spelled out in the contract |
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therandom9
Joined: 10 May 2010
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Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 4:39 pm Post subject: |
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I want to leave the option to stay, not gonna pull a runner.
I was mainly curious as to whether people had knowledge about the parttime thing or the keeping track of hours thing. |
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