The National Labour Commission (NLC) has blamed the increasing number of
industrial disputes on the limited knowledge of most employees on the
provisions of the Labour Act, Act 6511, 2003.
Should employees and employers fully abreast themselves with the
requirements of the Act, the Executive Secretary of the commission, Mr
Charles Adongo Bawaduah, said industrial dispute would have been
minimised and the NLC sparred of some cases.
He said the Act was relatively new compared to other legislations
and many also thought that the provisions of the Industrial Relations
Act 299 could still be applied.
“We need to do more education and I foresee that the NLC can embark
on some education but predominantly, the unions must also take it up and
educate their members to appreciate the provisions of the Labour Act,”
he said in an interview.
The NLC received a total of 664 complaints last year. Out of the
figure, 178 were settled, with 486 of them currently at various levels
of settlement at the NLC.
Complaints that go before the commission involve disputes related to
dismissals, termination of appointments, retirement
benefits/end-of-service and unpaid salaries.
The rest are workmen compensation, redundancy, medical and unfair labour practices and others.
Citing strike actions, Mr Bawaduah said the law had substantially
changed but some people still embarked on strike actions without due
process.
“It’s either they are not aware or they just don’t care. The
employers’ associations also need to carry out some public education for
their members and companies. There are those who think that once I own a
business, I can hire and fire but the working relationship is governed
by law and so it’s important that they have thorough knowledge of the
provisions of the law to be able to comply,” he said.
Number of cases
The NLC received 108 complaints of dismissals, 221 of termination,
167 unfair labour practices, 93 of unpaid salaries, 55 cases of
redundancy, 13 of retirement benefits/end-of-service, and six of workmen
compensation.
Also, 12 cases on mediation and strike / lockouts were received, five
on intention to embark on strike and three on voluntary arbitration
were handled by the NLC.
A total of 350 cases were settled by the commission in 2016 out of a rollover of 48 cases from 2015.
Enforcement of the provisions of the law
He deduced that the majority of public sector strike actions were
illegal because in most cases they refused to comply with the provisions
of the law relating to strike actions because either they had not given
notice or even when they gave notice they continued to embark on the
strike when negotiations were still ongoing,which was against the law.
“They may be an essential service such as nurses and doctors which
the law prohibits from embarking on strike actions yet they go anyway. I
don’t think that these persons do not know the provisions of the law;
they do know. It’s just that they are of the belief that if they do it,
nothing will happen to us,” he said.
Mr Bawaduah said in most cases, the government had not enforced the provisions of the law relating to strike actions.
“You can terminate the employment of such persons or withhold their
salaries. If a public sector workers know that even if they go on strike
they will still be paid, they will go on strike,” he said.
He said the workers in the private sector were not necessarily
satisfied with their conditions of service, but they knew that the law
would be applied to the letter and spirit if they embarked on
illegality. The same could not be said of the public sector, so
enforcement of the law should be taken seriously in the public sector
organisations.
The Labour Act
The Labour Act 2003, Act 651 was developed to put together existing
laws on labour to conform to the 1992 Constitution and the conventions
of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) to which Ghana is a
signatory.
After wider consultations between the social partners, namely, the
government, employers, organised labour and other stakeholders in the
labour market, seventeen laws on labour were repealed, with the
exception of the Workmen’s Compensation Law 1987, PNDCL 187, and the
Factories, Offices and Shops Act, 1970 (Act 328), amendments to Sections
93, 95(1), and 124 of the Children’s Act, 1998 (Act 560).
The Labour Act covers all employers and employees except those in
strategic positions such as the Armed Forces, Police Service, Prisons
Service and the Security Intelligence Agencies.
Major provisions of the Labour Act include establishment of public
and private employment centres, protection of employment relationship,
general conditions of employment, employment of persons with disability,
employment of young persons, employment of women, fair and unfair
termination of employment, protection of remuneration, temporary and
casual employees, unions, employers’ organisations and collective
agreements, strikes, establishment of a National Tripartite Committee,
forced labour, occupational health and safety, labour inspection and the
establishment of the NLC
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