Are there any laws or codes which cover (or give guidelines) for probation periods at the beginning of employment?
Are there any laws or codes which cover (or give guidelines) for probation periods at the beginning of employment?
I'd have to check the regs to get the exact limits, but our employment contract which passes muster includes a standard three months probation period with 24 hours notice from either side - employer or employee.
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Yes, the three month, 24hr thing seems to be pretty standard and accepted practice. It falls outside of the BCEA AFAIK though (I did a quick scan, but didn't find anything).
Someone asked me about this today, so I was just wondering what law was behind it. I suspect there is a large amount of common law established by CCMA cases, but I'm really not sure. Are there possibly some codes of good practice which have some guidelines?
I don't think that's the issue. I think it is about how long you can keep an employee as temporary until you are obliged to appoint them as permanent staff. There is also something about notice periods in those regs too. Kinda like the sick leave provision. But I'm going to have to look them up to make sure, and EOM it's not going to happen today from my side![]()
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Thats the way I understand it to be. I was forced to attended to a ccma case recently by one of my ex staff members and this issue came up. My three months period was considered reasonable. The whole issue hangs on what you put in your employment contract. Beyond three months is unreasonable and there is a general reasonableness test equation of time verses job function. In other words a floor sweeper only needs a few days/weeks to learn to sweep but a teckie type will need more time for everyone to check everyone out.I suspect there is a large amount of common law established by CCMA cases, but I'm really not sure.
Another issue that came up was that there was still an expectation for the employer to pay notice pay on a normal two week type basis again depending on the notice period required. So it did not become a simple 24hour story.
No law was referred to and everything was based on precedent.
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the issue of notice is a requirement in terms of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act and would not have been based on precedent. The specific section and Act is not always quoted in these processes unless you ask why are you saying so and so, otherwise these processes would become an endless ramble of exactly what the law says.
The BCEA sets out the notice periods for specific employment periods. No contract of employment can be less favourable than the BCEA, therefor the 24 hour notice is deemed to be less favourable and you would have to comply with the statutory notice periods.
Hi there,
You could read Schedule 8 Code of Good Practice : Dismissal, Probation. (Labour Relations Act, 66 of 1995) Be very carefull of the three month, 24 hr standard. Probationers have the same rights in terms of termination of the contract as any full time employee. The 24 hr thing would not stand should an unfair dismissal dispute be referred.
It looks like MLK is onto something here.
The Basic Conditions of Employment section 37 is as follows:
I couldn't track down a copy of Schedule 8, though.1) Subject to section 38, a contract of employment terminable at the instance of a party to the contract may be terminated only on notice of not less than--
a) one week, if the employee has been employed for six months or less;
b) two weeks, if the employee has been employed for more than six months but not more than one year;
c) four weeks, if the employee--
i) has been employed for one year or more; or
ii) is a farm worker or domestic worker who has been employed for more than six months.
2)
a) A collective agreement may permit a notice period shorter than that required by subsection (1).
b) Despite paragraph (a), a collective agreement may permit the notice period of four weeks required by subsection (1)(c)(i) to be reduced to not less than two weeks.
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And I want to know what I'm supposed to do when the employee gives an "instant" (no notice) resignation the day after pay day!
Unpaid leave of absence?
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