2. What is a "continuous" contract of employment?
   
According to Schedule 1 of the Employment Ordinance ,
an employee who has been employed continuously by the same employer for
four weeks or more, with at least 18 hours worked in each week, is regarded
as being employed under a continuous contract of employment. Hence, a
part-time employee who fulfils the above requirements is also employed
under a continuous contract.
All employees who are covered by the Employment Ordinance, irrespective of their hours of work,
are entitled to basic protection under the Ordinance including
the payment of wages, restrictions on wage deductions and the granting
of statutory holidays, etc. However, employees who are employed
under a continuous contract are further entitled to such benefits
as rest days, paid annual leave, sickness allowance, severance
payment and long service payment, etc.
If a trade or business is transferred from one person to another, the period of employment of an employee in that trade or business at the time of the transfer shall count as a period of employment with the transferee (the "new boss"). In other words, the transfer shall not break the continuity of the period of employment for that employee.
In any dispute about whether a contract of employment
is a continuous contract or not, the burden of proving that it
is not a continuous contract will be on the employer.
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