articles
Determining whether a work created by an employee is an employee work for copyright purposes has serious practical consequences. The use of the employer’s equipment or materials doesn’t necessarily mean that a work is an employee work. Similarly, the employee’s use of his own equipment or materials doesn’t automatically mean that the work is not an employee work. Warsaw Court of Appeal judgment of 20 June 2018 (case no. I ACa 18/17)
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Our
blog is for everyone professionally involved with labour law and human
resources.
The profile of employment law is clearly rising. The complexity of issues presented in this field is also growing. It can be said without exaggeration that nearly everything in business revolves around employees. Apart from inflation in the regulations, this is affected by changes in society and civilisation, including demographics, increased mobility of workers, and growth of new technologies.
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Polish employers
sending workers on foreign business trips more and more often have legitimate
doubts whether they should apply for an A1 certificate for such staff. This is
a document required in the case of posting of workers, confirming that they are
covered by the social security legislation of the given jurisdiction. The
problem mainly involves how to understand the notion of “posting” as used in
European rules for coordination of social security systems, which govern the issuance
of A1 certificates.
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Since January 2019, employers may keep their employees’ records in electronic versions. However, labour law regulations do not define the concept of electronic version. Nonetheless, certain guidelines are to be found in the provisions of the Labour Code and the regulation dated 10 December 2018 of the Minister of the Family, Labour and Social Policy on employee documentation specifying the requirements related to changing the version of employee documentation from paper to electronic.
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Amendments
to the Polish Labour Code in force since May 2019 resolved the existing doubts
as to the admissibility of obtaining employees’ consent to processing of their
personal data by employers.
Before, the courts had held quite clearly that if an employee’s consent to processing of his personal data were considered a circumstance legalising the gathering of personal data from an employee other than those specified in Art. 221 of the Labour Code, that would constitute a breach of that provision and a circumvention of the law (Supreme Administrative Court judgments of 1 December...
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A major change to the Labour Code
entered into force on 7 September 2019, making it easier for employees to
pursue claims for mobbing.
Under Art. 943 of the Polish Labour Code, an employee may seek compensation (zadośćuczynienie) for a detriment to the employee’s health caused by mobbing, as well as damages (odszkodowanie) in an amount no less than the minimum wage. But previously, as a condition for seeking damages, the employee had to terminate the employment on the grounds of mobbing.
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