9 is the pay grade, not the number of days - 9D means a grade 9 person on
days conditions.

It may be a continuing or fixed term contract.


On 7 September 2010 10:23, Richard P Edwards <[email protected]> wrote:

> This is why I find the 9 days bit intriguing. In the "old" days I used to
> put in 120  hour weeks, so I know exactly what you mean by addiction... the
> interesting part is that the UK seems to have gone to part time contracts
> where, as Simon says, you can work an 80 hour week with no overtime.
> OK, you get days off in lieu, but in that kind of job I suspect that
> finding the free days to take off could be pretty difficult... unless you
> take a long holiday every summer... in which case the BBC office effectively
> "closes" for that time.
> I think that I can see this ending is all sorts of chaos. :-) In my case,
> we did not get paid days off in lieu... so if you needed to sleep you had to
> swallow the financial inconvenience. Neither way is perfect, but calling for
> a contractual 9 day week seems somehow unsettling for me.
> Looks like a great job though, they'd also prefer someone "uncompetitive" -
> now that made me smile.
> Regards
> RichE
>
>
-- 
Simon Thompson
GMAIL Account

Reply via email to