Common use of Identical Hire Dates Clause in Contracts

Identical Hire Dates. When two (2) or more employees have the same Bargaining Unit and/or Classification Seniority credits within an agency, seniority shall be determined by last date of hire in a classification covered by this agreement. Should a tie still exist, seniority shall be based on the last four (4) digits of the employee’s Social Security numbers. The lowest number shall be considered the most senior. (E.g. 0000 is more senior than 9999.)

Appears in 11 contracts

Sources: Collective Bargaining Agreement, Collective Bargaining Agreement, Collective Bargaining Agreement

Identical Hire Dates. When two (2) or more employees have the same Bargaining Unit and/or Classification Seniority credits within an agency, seniority shall be determined by last date of hire in a classification covered by this agreementhire. Should a tie still exist, seniority shall be based on the last four (4) digits of the employee’s 's Social Security numbers. The lowest number shall be considered the most senior. (E.g. 0000 is more senior than 9999.)

Appears in 3 contracts

Sources: Collective Bargaining Agreement, Collective Bargaining Agreement, Collective Bargaining Agreement

Identical Hire Dates. When two (2) or more employees have the same Bargaining Unit and/or Classification Seniority credits within an agency, seniority shall be determined by last date of hire in a classification covered by this agreement. Should a tie still exist, seniority shall be based on the last four (4) digits of the employee’s 's Social Security numbers. The lowest number shall be considered the most senior. (E.g. 0000 is more senior than 9999.)

Appears in 1 contract

Sources: Collective Bargaining Agreement

Identical Hire Dates. When two (2) or more employees have the same Bargaining Unit and/or Classification Seniority credits within an agency, seniority shall be determined by last date of hire in a classification covered by this agreement. Should a tie still exist, seniority shall be based on the last four (4) digits of the employee’s employee‟s Social Security numbers. The lowest number shall be considered the most senior. (E.g. 0000 is more senior than 9999.)

Appears in 1 contract

Sources: Collective Bargaining Agreement