Hello, I wanted to clear a doubt regarding resignation after long leaves.
Scenario:
An associate went on long leave (2 months) with effect from 24-Mar-2011. They returned on 25-May-2011 and resigned. Now, the questions are:
1. What should be the last working day and term date?
2. Please explain the difference in LWD, resignation date, and term date.
3. Is it mandatory that the last working day and term date should be the same, or should they be different in this scenario?
4. Should we consider the long leaves as LOPs and give the PLs in FnF?
5. Or should we give the associate long leaves as PLs?
6. Until what date should we prepare the experience letter?
7. What if an associate has approval for long leaves from their managers and HR representative, and they promised their term date as 25-May-2011?
Please explain the process/procedure for absconding cases, as we have different opinions regarding this.
Thanks & Regards,
Ritu Arora
From India, Madras
Scenario:
An associate went on long leave (2 months) with effect from 24-Mar-2011. They returned on 25-May-2011 and resigned. Now, the questions are:
1. What should be the last working day and term date?
2. Please explain the difference in LWD, resignation date, and term date.
3. Is it mandatory that the last working day and term date should be the same, or should they be different in this scenario?
4. Should we consider the long leaves as LOPs and give the PLs in FnF?
5. Or should we give the associate long leaves as PLs?
6. Until what date should we prepare the experience letter?
7. What if an associate has approval for long leaves from their managers and HR representative, and they promised their term date as 25-May-2011?
Please explain the process/procedure for absconding cases, as we have different opinions regarding this.
Thanks & Regards,
Ritu Arora
From India, Madras
If the long leave was approved, then his last working day would be the day he resumed his duty and was actually relieved from his duties, i.e., 25th May in your example. If he had PL to his credit, you can mark the leaves as PL; otherwise, it would be LOP only. Having sufficient PL to his credit and marking the approved leaves as LOP will not benefit you anyway because on his full and final settlement, you will have to encash the PL anyway. His experience letter should be up to the date of his actual relieving, i.e., 25th May. I don't know what the Term date is. Please bear with me.
Regards,
Madhu.T.K
From India, Kannur
Regards,
Madhu.T.K
From India, Kannur
Hi all, what if an employee just informs about their leave and, without approval from the concerned authority, takes a week's leave and then, after a week, sends a resignation email? Should we still provide them with a relieving letter for the date they resigned, or should their last working day be only until their last sanctioned leave?
Awaiting your reply!!!
Thanks,
Shweta :)
From India, Pune
Awaiting your reply!!!
Thanks,
Shweta :)
From India, Pune
CiteHR is an AI-augmented HR knowledge and collaboration platform, enabling HR professionals to solve real-world challenges, validate decisions, and stay ahead through collective intelligence and machine-enhanced guidance. Join Our Platform.