According to a report by Bloomberg, some employees at the company found that their first paycheck of the year had been sent to their retirement accounts due to a technical error.
The Grand Canal Dock railway station in Dublin has a logo on it.
Artur Widak/NurPhoto is pictured.
The company did not respond to a request from Forbes to confirm the incident, but it did apologize to employees and assure them that the error would be fixed by Monday.
WBRZ-TV reported that the November incident at Southern University left employees with overdraft notices after their paychecks were accidentally withheld.
In December, some Connecticut state workers were told they would receive triple pay, but the error was corrected soon after.
PBS reported in October that many State Department employees had been underpaid due to technical errors and one Foreign Service officer had been paid almost $10,000 in unmerited hardship pay.
The bonuses for 20 employees were accidentally given to all 3,590 employees in New York City.
Several employers and employees at three Florida hospitals have been affected by the ongoing attack on the HR company Kronos.
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A study shows that 54 percent of U.S. workers have encountered a paycheck error. According to a 2020 survey by the American Payroll Association, the leading causes of payroll problems are poor technology, errors and delays. One in five payroll professionals admitted to cutting corners to make sure payroll was finished on time, according to a survey.
A key quote.
One employee of the search engine joked on an internal forum that they might be paid nothing so they can appreciate their current salary.
Surprising fact.
Men were less willing to report accidental overpayment than women were. The study found that men were willing to take an extra pay cut to raise the issue.
Some staff have no bank deposit on their paychecks.