- Employment Law
- Marcel Houben
- notice period , unpaid first day of absence , compromise proposal , motivation , lay-off
Consequently, the rules should have been adapted as from 8 July 2013.
Only at the last minute a “final compromise proposal of the Minister of Work” has been tolerated by
the industrial relations partners. The proposal still raises a lot of questions. Nevertheless, the
proposal must be converted into effectively applicable rules at the latest by 31 December 2013, be
it by legislation or by collective labour agreement.
No doubt a hussars’ job for Minister De Coninck !
Already in 1993 the Constitutional Court (at the time the “Arbitration Court”) warned the
legislator that the differences of the employment status of the blue-collar workers (workers
performing mainly manual work) and the white-collar workers (workers performing mainly intellectual
work) could not be justified any longer on an objective and reasonable way on the basis of that
criterion. At that time the choice was still made for a solution by graduality by granting the
legislator the necessary and appropriate time to undo the differences.
In its decision, dated 7 July 2011, the Constitutional Court concluded that – notwithstanding the
warning of back in 1993 – the legislator had things let be during almost 20 years, save for some
modest attempts to change things. Therefore, in its decision of 7 July 2011, the Court imposes on
the legislator to undo the differences, at stake in the decision, within the next two years.
The legislator (together with the industrial relations partners) was not successful in doing so.
The parties concerned did not get beyond the point of putting together a “Final compromise proposal
of the Minister of Work”, which – according to the proposal – must be converted into effectively
applicable rules on 31 December at the latest.
As a consequence of the above, a legal vacuum came into existence as from 8 July 2013 up to the
date, on which the new rules become effective, particularly as regards the differences at stake in
the decision of 7 July 2011, that is the notice periods for the blue-collar workers (article 59 of
the law relating to employment contracts) and the unpaid first day of absence from work due to
illness as applicable to the blue-collar workers (article 52, §1, second to fourth paragraph of the
law relating to employment contracts).
From a strict legal point of view, on the one hand, as from 8 July 2013, article 59 can not be
relied upon anymore to determine the notice period for a blue-collar worker, but, on the other
hand, the new rules do not yet apply. Repeatedly, it has been suggested that this situation should
put the blue-collar worker in a position to claim application of the notice periods for
white-collar workers and that he should be in a position to claim payment for damages from de
Belgian State, because he finds himself in a completely uncertain legal position as a result of the
negligence of the Belgian State because of its failure to meet the 8 July 2013 deadline.
Albeit that, also by the Constitutional Court, the differences in general between blue-collar workers and white-collar workers are questioned, yet the final compromise proposal focuses on the differences, particularly at stake in the decision of 8 July 2013: the notice periods for blue-collar workers and the unpaid first day of absence due to illness.
For the workers who are engaged as from 1 January 2014, the notice periods, determined in terms of weeks (as opposed to, at present, days for the blue-collar workers, and months for the white-collar workers), are fixed as follows :
The workers, who are employed at 1 January 2014, maintain their rights, acquired up to 1 January
2014 pursuant to the rules as existing at present. For the period of employment as from 1 January
2014, a notice period, calculated in accordance with the rules above and taking into consideration
the time of service as from 1 January 2014, is added to the acquired notice period referred to
above.
As a result of the above, the rules concerning notice periods, as applicable at present for the
white-collar workers, including the evaluation of the reasonable notice period on the basis of the
time of service, the age, the remuneration and the function, shall continue to have an important
impact for a considerable time on the applicable notice periods.
If a blue-collar worker, who is employed at 1 January 2014, is, in accordance with the new
system and taken into consideration the total time of service, entitled to a notice period which is
longer than the notice period, he is entitled to pursuant to the existing system, the new rules
will be applied with immediate effect provided the blue-collar worker has a time of service of at
least 30 years at the date of publication of the new rules in the Belgian State Gazette.
For the blue-collar workers, having build up a time of service of at least 20 years, 15 years and
10 years at date of publication in the Belgian State Gazette, the new regulation will become
entirely applicable as from, respectively, 1 January 2014, 1 January 2015 and 1 January 2016. For
the remaining category of blue-collar workers, the new system will be entirely applicable only as
from 1 January 2017.
Consequently, the currently applicable rules concerning the determination of the notice periods for
blue-collar workers will still remain applicable for some years.
As to the additional cost, resulting from the new system for the blue-collar workers, the employers
will receive a compensation, which will we financed by means which will become available as a
result of changing the tax release of a part of the severance pay.
In a number of industrial sectors, regulations have been introduced, providing for a supplement
to the unemployment allowance payable to the blue-collar workers. In the new system, it will be
allowed to deduct this supplement from the “notice period or – compensation”. It is not clear hoe
such a deduction can be put into practice if the notice period has to be performed (as opposed to
termination by payment of a severance pay). In addition, the question arises whether such deduction
will apply only in the case of payment of the supplement by the employer, or also in the case of
payment of the supplement through the intermediary of the sector social fund.
All workers, having at least 6 years of time of service, will be entitled to outplacement services,
for a total value of four weeks salary. The cost for the outplacement services can be deducted from
the severance pay, provided the severance pay covers a period of 6 months. The question remains
whether such deduction will also be allowed if the severance pay covers a period of 27 weeks
(notice period applicable as form the beginning of the 9th year of service), or is deduction
allowed only if the severance pay, after deduction of the cost for the outplacement services,
covers a period of 6 months. The paragraph in the proposal, following the paragraph concerning the
above, suggests that the second alternative applies: the workers who have to perform the notice
period, will have to take out the outplacement services during the days of allowed absent from work
for “job hunting” in as much as “….. a notice period of at least 7 months is performed.”
The sectors have 5 years to introduce measures, substituting 1/3 of the notice period or of the
severance pay, aiming at increasing the availability of the worker for the labour market, to the
extent the remaining 2/3 of the notice period or of the severance pay covers 6 months. It is not
clear how this can be put in practice if the notice period is performed. Parafiscal measures have
been announced in order to encourage the implementation of such measures.
The partners in industrial relations are granted the possibility to exclude activities from the
new rules and these activities have to be selected on the basis of agreed upon “generic criteria”.
Collective labour agreement nr 75 (with respect to the notice periods for blue-collar workers)
remains applicable to these activities, in as much as the notice periods, applicable pursuant to
collective labour agreement, are shorter than the notice period applicable pursuant to the new
regulation.
Surprisingly, reference is made to “activities” as opposed to “sectors”. This could result in
different notice periods in one sector, even in one enterprise, to the blue-collar workers,
depending on their activities. Certainly, Minister De Coninck has/had the intention to limit this
exception to the strict minimum, mainly having in mind the construction industry. Meanwhile, it
became clear that the employers’ side may be having somewhat different ideas about these exceptions
and also other “activities” are pushing to enter the door to the “room of the exceptions”.
In view of mitigating the additional costs, resulting for the employers from the new regulation, a number of measures and actions are announced.
In order to render the “final compromise proposal” fit for implementation, a number of issues will have to be resolved. As examples, reference is made to the following:
So far, a general regulation providing for the motivation of a lay-off by the employer exists
only for the blue-collar workers: article 63 of the law relating to employment contracts: a lay-off
is abusive if the reasons for the lay-off are not related either to the capabilities or the
behaviour of the worker or to the operating necessities of the company. If the worker challenges
the reasons invoked by the employer, the latter has to submit evidence of the reasons invoked; if
the employer fails to do so, he is liable for payment of a supplemental lump sum indemnity
equivalent to 6 months salary.
In the “final compromise proposal” the Minister of Work is charging the industrial relations
partners with entering into a collective labour agreement within the National Labour Council
relating to “ ... a regulation relating to the motivation of a lay-off and a good HR-policy
concerning lay-offs ...”. This collective labour agreement should, according to the proposal, enter
into force as from 1 January 2014. Albeit that, as it seems, the industrial relations partners are
put under pressure by the Minister of Work to meet the deadline, the question remains whether this
deadline isn’t too ambitious; the fact that the issue of the motivation of the lay-off is left to
the industrial relations partners, indicates clearly how delicate and sensible the question is.
At date of entering into force of the new collective labour agreement, article 63 of the law
relating to employment contracts will be abolished.
A real unified status of blue-collar workers and white-collar workers will naturally not be
realized by the simple implementation of the “final compromise proposal”. With respect to a number
of other items, far-reaching differences between blue-collar workers and white-collar workers
remain in existence (see o.a. our "news"-item on our website “Blue-collar
workers, white-collar workers ... Quo vadis?").
Neither the Arbitration Court in its decision of 8 July 1993, nor the Constitution Court in its
decision of 7 July 2011, left any doubt about the fact that a complete unified legal status must be
the ultimate goal.
In line with this general purpose, the industrial relations partners have been given the assignment
“…… to settle in accordance with a pressing time frame the other elements of the file “blue-collar
workers/white-collar workers ...”.
The vagueness of this assignment illustrates clearly and abundantly the delicate nature of the
issue. The question remains therefore when a real unified legal status may/can be put into
practice.