Home › Forums › Labour Law Debate › WHAT IS AN INDEPENDENT OPERATION FOR PURPOSES OF DEFINING A WORKPLACE?
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1st March 2022 at 3:21 pm #12633Ivan IsraelstamSpectator
Section 11 of the LRA provides for recognition of trade unions that have sufficient membership in the workplace. And section 213 defines a ‘workplace’ as a place where employees work for an independent operation. However, the LRA does not define what is meant by an ‘independent operation’. What are the factors that employers and trade unions must take into account in deciding whether a workplace is independent so as to define the scope of that workplace for recognition purposes?
8th March 2022 at 11:54 am #12634Patrick DealeKeymasterThe factors are expressed in the rest of the definition of a “workplace” in s213 (c) –
“If an employer carries on or conducts two or more operations that are independent of one another by reason of their size, function or organisation, the place or places where employees work in connection with each independent operation, constitutes the workplace for that operation”.
The Constitutional Court considered how these factors should be applied in AMCU v Chamber of Mines & Others (CCT87/16/ [2017] ZACC 3 (21 February 2017).
The Chamber represents mining companies in wage negotiations with NUM, Solidarity and UASA who have majority membership in the gold sector. AMCU had a majority at 5 mines but not across the whole sector. It wanted to negotiate wages for its members at the 5 mines where they had majority membership. It claimed that each mine was a “workplace”.
The employers said No. This was because AMCU’s members were bound by the collective agreement covering the whole gold sector in terms of s23 (1) (d) of the LRA.
The CC agreed with the Chamber and earlier rulings of the LC and LAC on this point. It said that the primary factor is “functional organization” – “location” is a secondary factor.
A workplace is where employees work collectively. It’s not a place where a single employee works. And it may be a single location or a number of locations. The factors to determine the “functional organization” of an operation are the independence of the operation and its size, function, and organization.
On the facts of the AMCU case, the CC found that the 5 mines at which AMCU had majority membership, were not independent operations. Each mining company constituted a single industry-wide workplace. This was even though some of the companies had concluded separate recognition agreements with AMCU at individual mines,
17th March 2022 at 1:40 pm #12643Michael BagraimKeymasterMy understand as to what is a workplace is quite simplistic. If it is seen as a separate cost center then that would constitute a workplace. Some of the courts and arbitrators have seen the physical place as a separate work place.
8th April 2022 at 5:47 pm #12679Ingrid LewinKeymasterThe definition of workplace will depend on the facts of each case. Different operations may be different workplaces only if they are operationally independent. The pivotal concept is independence.
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