By WILLIAM MAEMA
The draft Employment Act
(Amendment) Bill, 2019 published by the Kenya Law Reform Commission in
April introduces novel concepts into Kenyan employment law which, only a
few
years ago would have been considered anathema at the workplace.
years ago would have been considered anathema at the workplace.
Technology
has created the reality of a virtual workplace which enables employees
to work from any location without having to report to the office at all
save for essential face to face assignments like meetings which are
increasingly also being conducted via video or teleconference.
Flexi
time, as it is called, also means that there are no mandatory working
hours provided that the employee is able to work from elsewhere and
deliver on their assignments. It is argued that this concept is good for
‘work-life’ balance especially for employees who may need to attend to
personal chores while working from home or the gym.
The
draft law provides that any employee is entitled to apply for flexible
working hours and the employer is bound to consider such an application
and respond to them within a reasonable period. An application will only
be refused on one or more of the grounds set out in the proposed law
such as where the request imposes an additional financial burden on the
employer, it has a detrimental effect on the employer’s ability to meet
customer demands, the employer is unable to re-organise work among the
existing staff or is unable to recruit additional staff, it results in a
detrimental impact on quality and performance or there is insufficient
work during the hours when the employee proposes to work. This list is
not exhaustive and the Cabinet Secretary can prescribe more grounds.
In
addition, the draft law introduces novel kinds of leave which, although
new in Kenya, are in line with modern global trends. For instance, it
has always been unclear whether a woman who has a stillbirth is entitled
to maternity leave or sick off. The proposed law grants such a worker
one-month leave with full pay.
Since men have been known to misuse paternity leave, henceforth
the application for paternity leave will be accompanied by a birth
notification of the child in question.
An
employee who adopts a child aged two years and below will be entitled
to adoption leave of one month with full pay. Where a child is born
pursuant to a surrogate motherhood agreement, the commissioning parent
will be entitled to two months leave upon the birth of the child. This
provision, in effect, gives legislative recognition to the validity of
surrogate agreements. It is instructive to note that it does not state
whether the ‘commissioning parent’ should be male or female. It is,
however, curious that this parental leave is shorter than maternity
leave yet the needs of an infant born through surrogacy arrangement are
no different from those of one born to its own biological mother.
Compassionate
leave has been a matter of company policy or discretion of the
employer. The draft law provides that an employee who has exhausted
their annual leave may be granted up to five days compassionate leave
upon the death of a parent, spouse, child or sibling. The implication
inherent in this wording is that employees will only be eligible for
compassionate leave if they have already used up their annual leave.
This
position is worse than the current situation where employees are
normally granted compassionate leave irrespective of the status of their
annual leave account. The definition of ‘sibling’ should also be
limited to immediate blood brothers and sisters to prevent abuse.
Sick
leave has been enhanced from 15 to 30 days with full pay and a further
15 days with half pay. However, the law should go further to clarify
what should happen after the exhaustion of both. Should the employer
terminate the contract or allow the employee to proceed on unpaid leave
and if so, for how long?
Perhaps to encourage employees
to pursue further studies, the draft law provides for an education
leave of 10 days per leave cycle to enable the employee to take
examinations at a recognised learning institution.
The
draft Bill also proposes that an employee is entitled to be provided
with a written statement of the reasons for dismissal. This entrenches
the fact that ‘you’re fired’ is no longer part of Kenyan employment law.
However,
since there is no corresponding duty upon the employee to give any
reasons to the employer for resignation, most employees simply quit
whenever they find a new job without giving notice, irrespective of the
cost and inconvenience suffered by the employer as a result of abrupt
resignation. To instil discipline among employees and balance the scales
somewhat, the law should provide for a certain amount of liquidated
damages over and above the contractual amount payable in lieu of notice
to be paid to the employer by an employee who deserts employment without
giving the requisite notice.
Employers routinely lose
cases in the employment court for failure to adopt a fair
termination/dismissal process yet the Employment Act does not set out
what that process entails in detail. This has given the courts the
leeway to decide subjectively whether the process adopted by the
employer was fair or not.
Considering that employers
read or understand court judgments, this so called mandatory process
remains largely unknown until it is breached. The proposed law seeks to
lay down the mandatory steps required to be taken by the employer in
order for the process to meet the threshold of fairness required by the
statute. The essentials of the process are that the employee must be
made fully aware of the charge against him, be given an opportunity to
be heard and informed of the right of appeal.
In light
of the hefty damages normally awarded to employees on account of fair
termination arising from breach of the process, the proposed law should
set out all the procedural steps more elaborately in a schedule to the
Act.
While the Employment Act recognises that a
disciplinary process is an internal affair that should not include
external participants such as advocates, by deleting that subsection the
draft allows advocates to participate in such proceedings. This is
likely to complicate matters for employers and make the proceedings
unnecessarily confrontational. Employers may be forced to hire their own
lawyers to attend the proceedings which are a significant cost
especially for those with hundreds of employees where disciplinary
proceedings are a regular occurrence.
The Employment
Act expressly provides that employees on probation are not entitled to
the disciplinary procedure prescribed for confirmed employees. The
courts have expressed serious reservations on the constitutionality of
such a provision. The draft law takes the same view and accords
employees serving on probation the same right to the due process as
confirmed employees.
The issue of whether every
employee is, upon termination of employment, entitled to service pay has
never been clear under Kenyan law. While for unionised staff the
collective bargaining agreement is usually clear that service pay is a
matter of right and will be computed in accordance with a pre-agreed
formula, the Employment Act makes provision for service pay but does not
indicate how it is to be computed.
It complicates the
matter further by subjecting service pay to numerous exceptions which
render it almost unavailable to an employee unless the employee is in
breach of his obligations to the NSSF.
Maema is a Senior Partner in the law firm of Iseme, Kamau & Maema Advocates. wmaema@ikm.co.ke
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