
Top stories






More news



Marketing & Media
Capitec’s new jingle makes banking fees as easy as 1, 2, 3, 6, 10







ESG & Sustainability
Empowering digital futures: Netstar donates R500k to Redtank ICT Academy





Amongst the range of amendments to the Labour Relations Act (LRA) which commenced on 1 January 2015, was the introduction of an amended Chapter 9, which is now called Regulation of Non-Standard Employment.
This amendment seeks to protect employees who are on fixed term or part time contracts, or who are employed by a labour broker and who earn below the statutory threshold which currently stands at R205 433.30.
The most significant consequences of these provisions are that from 1 April 2015:
For parties who are not exempt from these provisions, the three month period commenced at midnight on 31 December 2014.
The following parties are exempt from these provisions:
From 1 April 2015, unless there is a justifiable reason for a continuation of the employees' contracts on a fixed term basis, unjustified fixed term contract employees who were employed on 1 January 2015 would automatically have become permanent employees.
Also, justifiable fixed term contract employees, also employed on 1 January 2015, will be entitled to the same benefits as their permanent counterparts, as will part time employees, unless the employer can prove that "the different treatment is the result of a system that takes into account: seniority, experience or length of service; merit; the quality or quantity of work performed; or other criteria of a similar nature".
Included in the reasons which allow employers to extend a fixed term contract beyond three months are:
Labour broker employees who were employed to work for the same client on 1 January 2015 will be deemed to be the client's employees from 1 April 2015.
The three month period commenced from midnight on 31 March 2015 for those labour broker employees who had worked for the same client since before the amendments came into effect. They, too, must be treated 'not less favourably' than their permanent counterparts once the three month period expires.
Labour brokers and clients, who terminate the services of their employees prior to the expiry of the three month period in order to avoid their being deemed to be the client's employee, will find themselves at the receiving end of an unfair dismissal dispute.