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Different companies & countries have different regulations. In general the employer is responsible for the safety of its employees therefore he is legally (by law or for insurance) obliged to provide you with the necessary PPE. This can be either the actual equipment or an allowance to buy this equipment. As the employer can be held responsible, he can refuse access to the workfloor/site if you're not wearing the necessary PPE.
The verb form of 'provision' is to provide. Other forms include 'provided', 'providing', 'have provided', etc.
Not anywhere I know of.
To avoid any issues - legal, ethical, or otherwise - a past employer should provide employment verification for previous employees for as long as the employer is legally required to maintain records on that employee, which varies depending on the type of record and local laws.
Provide! Yay me:-)
examples: "provide assistance on the Tax Provision Package and FAS 109"; "to complete a US GAAP Tax Provision package".
Yes, in Texas, your employer has to provide you with uniforms but it is not a guarantee that it should be for free.
According to the OSHA Occupational Safety and Health Standards (29 CFR 1910) section 141.(c)(l)(i), employers are required to provide their employees with toilet facilities separated for each sex in all places of employment. The toilet facilities can be public restrooms or portable toilets, as long as they are available within the area of employment and have designations as either a men's or women's restroom. They don't need to be specifically assigned for employee or customer use, and the employer doesn't need to have single person bathrooms.
provision or provider.
The abstract noun forms for the verb to provide are provision and the gerund, providing.
The noun forms for the verb to provide are provider, provision, and the gerund, providing.
We don't actually have 'rest rooms' in the UK, just seperate public toilets for men and women. However, in places where there is public toilet provision for women only, men are legally entitled to use these, as the establishment should by law provide lavatory provision for both sexes.