Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Shutterstock/SOMNATH MAHATA

Explainer: Why it's taken a pandemic to get sick pay back on the government agenda

An employment law expert explains the current legal situation and the government’s options.

IT TOOK AN unprecedented public health crisis to draw attention to it but at long last, Ireland’s sick pay regime is finally set for an overhaul.

This week, the government launched a public consultation on sick pay, the first step in a process towards implementing a statutory right to sick pay and enshrining it in legislation.

But why exactly has it taken so long and why is Ireland considered an outlier in a European context when it comes to this issue?

To find out, we spoke to employment law expert Karen Killalea, partner and head of the employment team at Maples and Calder, the Maples Group’s Law firm in Ireland.

What’s the current legal situation?

As it stands currently, the vast majority of Irish employers are not legally obligated to offer paid sick leave to workers.

That doesn’t mean that huge swathes of the working population have no access to sick pay.

As Killalea explains, outside of the law itself, there are “a number of other sources of obligations” for employers, not least contracts of employment, which often guarantee access to sick pay arrangements.

All permanent public sector workers have a right to sick pay guaranteed by their contracts, she says, “an enormous cohort” within the Irish labour force.

Within the private sector then, certain industries are regulated by Sectoral Employment Orders.

“Those are sort of almost like national collective bargaining agreements,” Killalea explains — legally binding rules that determine the terms of employment within certain industries.

“They apply, for example, across the construction sector; across mechanical and electrical engineering and they cover thousands of people. They also provide for sick pay,” she says.

Finally, many workers within the private sector — mostly in white-collar industries — will have access to sick pay guaranteed by their contracts.

Overall, just about half of private sector workers have access to it through contractual arrangements, she says.

But again, because there is no legal obligation, Killalea explains it means that the vast majority of private sector workers “are dependent on the benevolence of their employer” to pay them for sick days. 

So who does that leave out?

Mostly low-paid, part-time or casual private-sector workers.

The obvious iniquity of this is that precarious and low-paid workers are often not financially capable of taking unpaid leave, meaning they’re forced to work when they’re ill.

These issues are, of course, heightened by the pandemic.

Earlier this week, deputy chief medical officer Dr Ronan Glynn highlighted the fact that some workers are still turning up for their jobs even though they’re displaying symptoms of Covid.

It’s obvious that for many people, concerns about pay or whether they’ll lose their job if they fail to show up override public health advice.

Killalea says, “People who are working in casual employment; low-paid work, they’re definitely vulnerable… I think if there’s one thing that the pandemic is teaching us that it is a false economy to incentivise people to attend work when they’re sick.” 

So what happens if I’m sick but my employer doesn’t provide sick pay?

You can avail of a State illness benefit.

The normal weekly rate of Illness benefit is €203 per week or €31.33 per day. 

The scheme is available to anyone under the pension age who has paid 26 weeks of PRSI contributions in the relevant tax year, and 26 weeks of PRSI contributions paid in the previous tax year.

An enhanced Covid-linked version of the scheme was rolled out earlier this year. 

Designed to incentivise workers who are diagnosed with the coronavirus or forced to self-isolate to stay at home rather than come into work, the scheme pays out at €350 per week.

Both employees and self-employed people can qualify for the COVID-19 enhanced Illness Benefit.

What do other countries do?

Within Europe, Ireland is an outlier when it comes to statutory sick pay.

Most of our continental neighbours place some kind of statutory obligation upon employers to pay workers for sick leave. 

German employers are required to pay the sick workers’ full wage for up to six weeks, tapering then to 70% of the worker’s salary for a maximum of 78 weeks. 

Denmark has a statutory sick pay system for up to nine months and in Portugal, it extends up to three years.

In many cases, the state will step in to cover some of the cost to the employer.

Killalea says, “In Germany, there is quite a significant government subsidy [to the employer] for statutory sick pay. So in other words, the system in Germany recognises the ability of the employer to pay and I think that’s probably a very sensible approach.”

It’s slightly different in the UK, where employers cover the full cost of sick pay.

“It’s not a very high level of sick pay. It’s relatively modest, but it does extend for up to 28 weeks.” 

Italy and France also operate sick pay systems where employers contribute to the cost of sick pay.

Why is Ireland so far behind on this issue?

Well, for a combination of reasons.

For one, as Killalea points out, compared to France or Germany, for example, a much smaller proportion of the working population here are covered by collective bargaining agreements.

Ireland has a broadly voluntary industrial relations system. This means that employers are not obliged to recognise or to negotiate with trade unions although everyone is free to join one.

“Vast swathes of private sector employees in continental Europe are already covered by heavily negotiated collective agreements,” Killalea says.

By contrast, contract negotiations in Ireland tend to me a lot more “ad hoc”.

What are the other reasons?

Politics, mainly.

In 2012, Joan Burton as Minister for Social Protection began a public consultation on introducing a statutory sick pay model.

As Dr Laura Bambrick, social policy officer at the Irish Congress of Trade Unions highlighted recently, it was actually the Troika — the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank and the European Commission — who raised the issue during the bailout years.

“They encouraged reform that would require employers to pay for the first two to four weeks of sickness, bringing an end to the unusual practice of the state picking up the full cost” through illness benefits.

Unfortunately, the conversation kicked off a major row within the Fine Gael-Labour Party coalition government of the time. 

The proposals were also met with fierce opposition from business lobbyists and representative groups like IBEC, who argued against forcing employers to foot the bill.

Widely expected to be introduced in the 2013 Budget, the plan eventually fell by the wayside.

It took a pandemic to put the issue back on the political agenda.

So what’s happening now?

In September, the Labour Party introduced a private members bill.

Entitled ‘Sick Leave and Parental Leave (Covid-19) Bill 2020’, the proposed legislation would entitle employees to a maximum of 30 days of paid sick leave “at the employee’s normal weekly rate of pay”. 

Separately, about a month later, the Oireachtas Committee on Covid-19 Response produced a report, which called for statutory sick pay to be rolled out to protect low-paid workers in high-risk industries like meat processing.

But the government decided to delay a debate on the Labour bill to facilitate a public consultation on the issue.

What is the public consultation and what will happen next?

Beginning this week and ending on 18 December, the public consultation will hear from trade unions and employers groups.

At the end of this process, a report will be produced informed by submissions from the various parties.

Although the exact timeline is yet to be finalised, it will likely be six months before any recommendations will be made

“What will happen is that the views will be taken into consideration. A costing will have to be done,” Killalea explains.

“The Department of Public Expenditure and Reform, obviously will be key in reviewing this, and then typically at the end of that, a report is produced, which will summarise the consultation.”

At the end of all of that, the government will either decide to amend the Labour Party’s bill or introduce one of its own, based on the consultation.

Commenting on the launch of the consultation process, Tánaiste and Minister for Enterprise Leo Varadkar said the government is committed to introducing new legislation as soon as possible.

“This needs to change and I am committed to introducing a statutory sick pay scheme that works for employees and employers as quickly as possible,” he said.

The government has committed to enacting statutory sick pay legislation by the end of 2021.

 

 

 

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.

View 23 comments
Close
23 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Frank Cauldhame
    Favourite Frank Cauldhame
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 2:12 AM

    Its totally unfair (the current status quo) and hits the most vulnerable sectors of employees hardest as stated in the article. FFG have no appetite judging by their past inaction to rectify this inequity. Leo is jumping on this bandwagon now as he realises its a populist idea but it has been put forward by other political parties and lobby groups on numerous occasions in the past but as FFG only ever posture to big business it has been conveniently ignored by them.

    148
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mary Nugent
    Favourite Mary Nugent
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 2:59 AM

    @Frank Cauldhame: he only likes people who get up early in the morning. So he said never mind him.

    13
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dangling Damo
    Favourite Dangling Damo
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 12:15 PM

    @Frank Cauldhame: prsi paid by alk workers is supposed to pay sick benefits but the satate has eroded these benefits to nothing (look at dental benefits) but still takes it the full amounts. It seems the more you put into the system the less benefits and rights you have.

    14
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Colette Kearns
    Favourite Colette Kearns
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 12:14 AM

    So it will take over 12 months for this to “ maybe “ happen, it’s amazing how it all seems to depend on what’s been legislated , some things pass overnight & others don’t!

    110
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mary Nugent
    Favourite Mary Nugent
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 2:59 AM

    @Colette Kearns: rents

    13
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Derek Poutch
    Favourite Derek Poutch
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 12:26 AM

    You only have to look at what happens with the budget every year when the price of alcohol and cigs goes up the very next day. Why do we have to wait until the end of 2021 for this?

    80
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Paul Mc
    Favourite Paul Mc
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 12:38 AM

    It’s amazing how the magic money tree can appear and disappear at the whim of overpaid political clones at their descretion.

    87
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Tom's
    Favourite Tom's
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 1:08 AM

    And no benefits for self employed if they are temporarily sick or break a limb or have surgery.Just feather their own nests all the time our FFG government disgust me.Plenty of benefits for public servants and they’ll keep being improved upon because that’s where the votes are.Government are borrowing every year to pay their wages and no talk to reduce their pay during this pandemic while some sectors have had little or no income for almost a year.Teachers are being hero worshiped for their work during the pandemic!!I have two leaving cert 2021 students and I have witnessed how little most of their teachers did during the first lockdown half were great and diligent with on line classes the other half were absolutely useless with a nice fat cheque coming in for six months.

    80
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Joe Kennedy
    Favourite Joe Kennedy
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 2:05 AM

    @Tom’s: half were great and half were useless but you say ‘most of their teachers’ did very little?! What?! And show us one example of where they have been, or are, hero worshipped….I’m genuinely interested. Have family and friends who are teachers and all I see usually is them getting absolutely hammered/bashed regardless of what they do, or don’t do! They seem to be right up there with politicians for drawing people’s ire….and unfairly so in my opinion.

    46
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Tom's
    Favourite Tom's
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 2:32 AM

    @Joe Kennedy: Regularly in the media you hear what a brilliant job they are doing and it is all spin to make the Dept of education look good.There is nobody talking about the difficulties the 2021 leaving cert students are going through.
    As I said before there were teachers who did no on line classes during the first lockdown and sorry I didn’t measure to the minute who were good and who were uselessSuffice to say a lot were useless
    Then they return to school in September and one of their teachers missing for five weeks with no proper replacementStudents regularly being asked to leave the classroom and sit in an empty classroom because there are too many students for the class
    Sitting in the classroom all of the time wearing jackets and gloves because the windows are wide open
    To be contd.

    44
    See 7 more replies ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Tom's
    Favourite Tom's
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 2:46 AM

    @Joe Kennedy:
    contd
    They don’t know if they are having mock exams or not don’t know if they are having oral exams or not no parent/teacher meetings curriculum being rushed through because they missed three months classes.More free classes than a normal year.
    These kids are genuinely worried now but Ms Foley and Mr Martin think everything is just hunky dory

    29
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Joe Kennedy
    Favourite Joe Kennedy
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 3:05 AM

    @Tom’s: you must be listening/watching different media to me but fair enough if you’ve picked that idea up somehow. I certainly haven’t. Most of my friends/family who teach have switched off from all media at this stage to mind themselves, but maybe they’ve just missed all the ‘hero worshipping’ that you’ve seen/heard! Your original comment had said half were great and half were useless….yet you now say a lot were useless?! You realise that none of the troubles you mentioned there are the fault of the teachers themselves, bar the online teaching thing last year, I assume? I’d say there are massive problems in all schools, as there is in every single work place in the country, but people are doing the best they can. Finally, where did you see/hear them saying everything was hunky dory?

    16
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Vic's Burd
    Favourite Vic's Burd
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 7:18 AM

    @Joe Kennedy: sadly @Tom’s isn’t far off the mark describing the situation for some students. My teenage then-2nd year student had two online classes per week at best during the first lockdown; other teachers just emailed assessments and essays to do. Next door goes to a different secondary school and it’s the same story there too. We were glad to see them going back to school in September even if it was a harsh environment (eg windows open).

    No one saying officially the teachers had it hunky-dory but it does seem that way to us parents, seeing our teenagers doing very little work from home.

    24
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Citygal
    Favourite Citygal
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 11:52 AM

    @Vic’s Burd: the little work being done might be more to do with your teenager than the amount of work that was actually sent to be done. Just saying

    3
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dangling Damo
    Favourite Dangling Damo
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 12:05 PM

    @Tom’s: all most all new public sector workers by are contracted to work until their 70. Most reciieve an appallingly low pension after 40+ years of work and like everyone else just get the statutory old age pension. People confuse the majority of public sector workers with the civil service higher grades who have had their salaries and benefits posted ad nauseam in the papers if you want to get the same rights like sick pay join a union and fight for it as public sector workers have over the years. If conditions in the public sector are so beneficial why has there not a rush to join the public sector during the tiger years or since just begrudgery when it went belly up and lip smacking when the conditions of public sector workers were eroded. Workers need to unite not squabble

    5
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dangling Damo
    Favourite Dangling Damo
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 12:12 PM

    @Dangling Damo: your comment about the self employed is quite true. They dont get the benefits they deserve and the state should back them when unable to work or experience difficulties. This however is ignored by the government and needs to be addressed but there isnt the appetite to do so and there wont be until we make our voices heard through our ballots. We should vite with our feet and not re elect the same stodgy uninspired yokels who in most cases are self serving and dont really have the electorates interests at heart.

    3
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Joe Kennedy
    Favourite Joe Kennedy
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 1:50 PM

    @Vic’s Burd: thanks for making my point for me. No hero worshipping going on that I have seen….more of that kind of comment. Two online classes per week and emailed assessments and essays sounds like they had a lot to keep them busy. Were the essays/assessments returned for correction? Family member here taught every 2nd lesson online as well as they were trying to balance child minding at the same time and assigned the class work to do in the intervening days. Long nights then correcting work submitted and preparing the online classes. Feedback was very positive, from what I gather, but you wouldn’t have been happy with that by the looks of it. Can’t please everyone I guess.

    3
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Carol Cunningham
    Favourite Carol Cunningham
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 8:06 AM

    My brother has a small business and employs two other people: he could not afford to pay one of them if they went sick as he is just trying to keep his head above water to pay their salary as is

    37
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Giddy
    Favourite Giddy
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 5:51 AM

    Worked as a plumber for years in Ireland never got entitled to any sick pay, Australia, New Zealand between 10-5 sick days per year, Its like they understand all workers get sick over here

    34
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Paul Mc
    Favourite Paul Mc
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 2:18 AM

    @Joe Kennedy,
    Agreed, teachers do a great job but it’s a pity a lot of their union bosses are full of bullsheet and the noble profession has gifted us so many school teachers who think they have the qualifications to run our country,when in reality some of them are not fit to teach primary school children.

    42
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Derek Moean
    Favourite Derek Moean
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 8:19 AM

    Because our Government do not Live in the real world..they haven’t a clue..

    21
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute The Irish Bull
    Favourite The Irish Bull
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 9:49 AM

    You work outside in all conditions on a building site – in many cases it’s raining and many employers expect you to stay out in it. But if you get sick from it, they don’t want to know.

    10
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute George Vladisavljevic
    Favourite George Vladisavljevic
    Report
    Nov 22nd 2020, 10:53 AM

    Money to pay for the sick days for the private sector should come from the same fund that pays for the workers in the public sector, as they too are putting money into that fund.

    9
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

Leave a commentcancel

 
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds