Asked to not date documents

KodaBubbles

New Member
Jurisdiction
North Carolina
So, the company I work for has given us payroll deduction forms and has asked us, in writing, to not date the forms. After carefully reading the form, at the end it says, "All advances not satisfied will be deducted in full when employment with (company) has been". It ends after that. 'When employment with (company) has been' what, exactly?
This company seems very sketchy and try to use Louisiana law while being in North Carolina and I am a North Carolina resident. I am wondering who I would need to speak to about my concerns. Would it be a lawyer, the labor board, higher up?
 
I am wondering who I would need to speak to about my concerns. Would it be a lawyer, the labor board, higher up?

Yes, you have the right to discuss this and other concerns with an attorney you select and trust, engaging her/him to assist you with your concerns/dilemmas.

If I were pondering your dilemma, I'd simply start seeking an employer that isn't sketchy, tricky, sneaky, or trying to screw their employees.
 
You told us nothing about the structure of your company. However, concerns over a payroll deduction form would seem best addressed to the payroll department or human resources..
 
at the end it says, "All advances not satisfied will be deducted in full when employment with (company) has been". It ends after that. 'When employment with (company) has been' what, exactly?

Terminated?

As in:

"All advances not satisfied will be deducted in full when employment with (company) has been terminated."

Which means that you are consenting to have the company deduct from your final paycheck any amounts that you owe the company for any advances of money previously made.

Might be somebody's typographic error, omitting a word, with nothing sketchy, tricky or sneaky about it.

Take the form to the person that handed it to you and say "Isn't there a word missing here"?
 
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