CCMA Information


Labour Court Judgements

Health and Safety



Most recent publications


UIF

AARTO



Discipline & Dismissal


Contracts of Employment

Poor performance



Conditions of Employment


Consumer Protection Act

Courses & Workshops 2012



Employment Equity


FAQs

Retrenchments



Contact Us


COID

Regular Concerns

 

Newsletter Signup

Your Email Address: *
 

1

 

facebook
twitter

 

Employers need a strategy to protect against slackers who utilise labour laws

Be safe from those who will take advantage

By Ivan Israelstam

In 1995 the old Labour Relations Act promulgated in 1956 was scrapped by the new ANC government. The new government and trade unions considered the old Act as not doing enough to provide sufficient protection for employees. By 1995 South Africa's new constitution had entrenched labour law rights strongly. Also, the ANC and Cosatu (the largest trade union grouping) had formed an alliance. As a result of these developments, the trade unions were easily able to force provisions into the new Labour Relations Act of 1995 (LRA) that suited the labour movement's agenda.

As time has passed the trade unions have been able to add further and stronger protections to the LRA.  In addition, Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) awards and Labour Court judgments have, over time, become more and more employee-friendly. Examples of these burgeoning legal protections for employees include:

  • Employees are entitled to join and participate in legitimate trade union activity without fear of being fired for this;
  • Employees are entitled to refuse to do the work of colleagues who are on strike;
  • Employees are entitled to a disciplinary hearing even where they are accused of being on an unprotected (illegal) strike;
  • Employees appear to have the right to motivate for permission to bring an external representative (eg a lawyer or trade union representative) into disciplinary hearings;
  • Employers may not terminate the employment of employees for reasons related to a takeover of a business as a going concern. This is irrespective of whether the termination takes place before or after the takeover;
  • Employers are obliged to renew fixed-term employment contracts if the employees concerned have a reasonable expectation of such a renewal;
  • Where the employer considers an employee to have absconded (left the employment without resigning) it cannot replace the employee without following a set of onerous procedures;
  • Where an employee accuses an employer in court or at the CCMA of having dismissed him unfairly and the existence of the dismissal is established the employer is assumed guilty of unfair dismissal until it proves itself innocent;
  • The CCMA is entitled to overturn the sanction of dismissal imposed by an employer even if the dismissal sanction could be seen by reasonable people to be fair;
  • Where an employer contemplates terminating the employment of an employee it is required to follow complex and stringent procedures before it can do so.

Many employers find these procedural requirements so onerous that they either try to bypass them or are afraid to ever dismiss employees.

In the case of Ntoyake v Open Arms Home for Children (2007, 10 BALR 946), the accused, the resident manager of the children's home, was dismissed for appearing in front of the children in an intoxicated state.

The CCMA agreed that Ntoyake was in fact guilty of this charge and that dismissal was an appropriate sanction. 

However, the arbitrator still found the dismissal to be unfair because the dismissed employee had not, at the disciplinary hearing, been given the chance to cross-examine those who had raised the complaint.

That is, the employer's failure to facilitate the cross-examination phase of the disciplinary procedure caused it to lose the case, on procedural lines. As a result of these statutory provisions and case law decisions South African employees are among the best-protected in the world today. It is clear that the intention of these laws is primarily to keep employees employed even if this results in difficulties for the employer. It seems that, based on recent patterns, as the new dispensation gets older the legal protection of employees is likely to continue to strengthen, and the ability of employers to run their organisations effectively could be increasingly hampered.

Despite this gloomy outlook, employers are strongly encouraged not to crack under the strain. Instead they are encouraged to develop the following simple strategy which can be very effective in protecting the damage to their businesses that can be done by employees who take unfair advantage of labour legislation.

That is, employers should:

  • With the help of labour law specialists, acquire the expertise needed to ensure that errant, incapacitated or redundant employees are not approached until proper procedures are in place
  • Join an employers' organisation (trade union for employers) to represent the employer in dealings with unions and at the CCMA and bargaining councils.

Ivan Israelstam is chief executive of Labour Law Management Consulting. He can be contacted on 011-888-7944 or This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Our appreciation to Ivan and The Star newspaper for permission to publish this article

  Related Articles

Courses & Workshops


Investigators & Initiators

24 & 25 May 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport



Health and Safety Representative Course

25 May 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

14 August 2012

Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks

 

30, 31 May & 01 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

New Amendment Bills for the Labour Relations Act (LRA) and the Basic Conditions of Employment Act (BCEA)

07 June 2012

Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town

13 June 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

  
Basic Labour Relations

07 June 2012 

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

08 June 2012

Southern Sun: Century City: Canal Walk: Cape Town  

Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment
08 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport
05 July 2012
Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town
17 August 2012
Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks
   
Chairing Disciplinary Hearings
20 & 21 June 2012
Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town

Recruitment, Selection and Appointment of Candidates
22 June 2012
Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town
27 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

Policies & Procedures
14 June 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport


Managing Day to Day Issues/ Problem Employees

28 June 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport


Health and Safety Incident/Accident Investigation (OHS and Mine Health and Safety)

29 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport
06 July 2012
Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town

15 August 2012

Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks


The OHS Act and Responsibilities of Management

04 July 2012

Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town

16 August 2012

Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks

  
Our Clients

Click here for a list of companies/ institutions that attended public courses and/or in-house training courses presented by Labour Guide during 2011



 
seta

Contact Details
Training courses,seminars and conferences

Labour Law and IR Related Workshops
(012) 661 3208
Fax: (012) 661 1411
Peraldo This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or Magda This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Manager: Susan Brits This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

Contact Details
Health and Safety 


Health and Safety Related Workshops
(012) 666 8284
Fax: (012) 666 8264
Deidre This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Manager: Tinus Boshoff This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it