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Training reimbursement
Written by: René Jakl
Photo by: Věroslav Sixt
The capital of know-how is highly
valued in the labor market. New employees or staff targeted for
promotion typically need not be concerned about specialized education
and training, as many firms send prospective employees on costly
short-term attachments abroad. Of course these firms want assurance
that the employee will not go to the competition when he returns
home. Can they contractually bind an employee to financial compensation
for training he has received if he leaves the company within a certain
period of time?
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The opinions of experts in personal agencies vary. For example,
Slavomil Hubálek, Director of ALEA-Psychologie, advises employees
not to sign such contracts. According to him, a work contract should
not contain complicated amendments that limit the employee in future
decisions, such as furthering a career. In addition he says, this
is in violation of the Czech Labor Code. Even in the case that an
employee signs on to liability of this type, it is not legally relevant
and therefore not enforceable by the court, he explains.
Prague attorney Karel Čermák Jr., of Čermák, Hořejš, Vrba Law Office,
agrees that claiming a reimbursement on expenses for education of
employees can be a problem in Czech courts. However, this is not
because of the illegality of such reimbursements, but due rather
to the traditional solidarity of court senates with employees regarding
disputes with employers. In addition, he states that there is no
existing judicature or uniform legal interpretation of the given
problem. Čermák defends the principle of reimbursement on expenses
for education and recently included it in one contract.
"If, for example, the employer pays hundreds of thousands on
tuition for an employee's MBA program then, it is legitimate,"
says Čermák. "Of course the firm wants to be sure that the
employee uses the acquired knowledge to their benefit and not for
the benefit of the competition." Reimbursement on expenses
for the education of an employee is not covered by the labor code,
but allegedly it is not in violation of it, either. However, according
to Čermák, the current Labor Code is written more for the lathe-worker
and the woman working on the line than for the manager.
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