FULL RECOMMENDATION
SECTION 26(1), INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS ACT, 1990 PARTIES: STL LOGISTICS - AND - 20 AGENCY WORKERS (REPRESENTED BY SERVICES INDUSTRIAL PROFESSIONAL TECHNICAL UNION) DIVISION:
SUBJECT: 1.Pay Increase
The claim before the Court relates to employees of two agencies who worked or work on the employer site. The claim arises from a collective agreement concluded in 2019 between the trade union and the employer in respect of staff directly employed by the employer. The 2019 agreement was concluded following a ballot of the membership of the trade union who were directly employed by the employer. The employees of two agencies who were members of the trade union were not balloted by the trade union at the time and can be concluded therefore to not be party to the collective agreement of 2019. The 2019 agreement provided for the payment of €1,250 each to the staff covered by the agreement ‘in recognition of the time that has elapsed since the claim was lodged with the company’. The Court notes that 10 of the agency workers in employment on the site in 2019 remain in the employment of agencies and located on the site. Approximately six or more of the agency workers who were in the employment of agencies and located on the site in 2019 are now in the direct employment of the employer. The remaining workers in the employment of the agencies and who were located on the site in 2019 are no longer in employment on the site either as employees of an agency or directly of the employer. The Court has earlier concluded that no basis exists for holding that the employees of agencies located on the site in 2019 were party to the 2019 collective agreement. The Court does however believe that, in equity, an acknowledgement is required that these workers were the subject of a period of ‘wage freeze’ in the same manner as the direct staff of the employer. The Court therefore recommends that a gesture of goodwill should, in the interest of good industrial relations, be made to the 10 staff who remain in the employment of agencies and located on the site and the approximately 6 of such staff who are now in the direct employment of the employer. The Court therefore recommends that an ex-gratia payment in the amount of €625 be made to each of these 16 or more workers and that any such payment should be made in the most tax efficient manner permissible under the code of the Revenue Commissioners. The Court so recommends.
NOTE Enquiries concerning this Recommendation should be addressed to Ceola Cronin, Court Secretary. |