South African lawmakers are reviewing public holiday pay regulations to eliminate confusion that could shortchange workers.
This comes after the Portfolio Committee on Employment and Labour is considering amendments to the Basic Conditions of Employment Act BCEA after identifying ambiguous wording that may allow unfair pay practices, BusinessTech reports.
Currently, the law states that employees working on a public holiday must receive at least double their normal wage or their standard pay plus earnings for hours worked, whichever is higher. However, legal experts flagged unclear phrasing in Section 182bii, raising concerns that some employers might exploit the wording to pay workers less than intended.
Committee members emphasised that while no major disputes have arisen yet, the wording creates semantic ambiguity that needs fixing. Thembinkosi Mkalipi, a senior official from the Department of Employment and Labour, supported clarifying the law to prevent future issues.
Another area under review involves public holidays falling on Sundays. Normally, Sunday work earns 1.5 times the usual wage, while public holidays warrant double pay.