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The Tánaiste will bring the proposals to Cabinet today. RollingNews.ie

Workers to get at least 10 days paid sick leave phased in between now and 2025

Statutory sick pay will be phased in to help employers to plan ahead and manage the additional costs.

LAST UPDATE | 9 Jun 2021

CABINET HAS SIGNED off on new legislation to give all workers the right to paid sick leave.

The government’s statutory sick pay scheme will be phased in over a four-year period, starting with three days per year in 2022, rising to five days payable in 2023 and seven days payable in 2024.

Employers will eventually cover the cost of 10 sick days per year in 2025. The statutory days a minimum level of sick pay a company must provide but they have the feeedom to offer more.  

Tánaiste and Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment, Leo Varadkar said it is being phased in to help employers, particularly small businesses, to plan ahead and manage the additional cost, which has been capped.

Sick pay will be paid by employers at a rate of 70% of an employee’s wage, subject to a daily threshold of €110.

The daily earnings threshold of €110 is based on 2019 mean weekly earnings of €786.33 and equates to an annual salary of €40,889.16.

It can be revised over time by ministerial order in line with inflation and changing incomes.

The rate of 70% and the daily cap are set to ensure excessive costs are not placed solely on employers, who in certain sectors may also have to deal with the cost of replacing staff who are out sick at short notice.

Speaking to reporters this afternoon, Varadkar said that the State is not contributing to the sick pay scheme and that the cost will be borne by employers. 

He said this is why it is being phased in: 

That is why we’re adopting this approach of phasing it in over a number of years, recognising that this is an additional cost of employers, which some of them will find hard to meet. But I would bear in mind and I’d ask employers to consider that, during the course of the pandemic, employers and small employers in particular have received exceptional support from the State from taxpayer

An employee will have to obtain a medical certificate to avail of statutory sick pay, and the entitlement is subject to the employee having worked for their employer for a minimum of six months. 

Once entitlement to sick pay from their employer ends, employees who need to take more time off may qualify for illness benefit from the Department of Social Protection subject to PRSI contributions.

Asked about the requirement that a doctor’s cert is required, Varadkar said that employers can “choose” to trust their employees and not require one but that it is “reasonable” to include it in the Statutory requirement.

He also said that he appreciates that some lower paid workers may struggle to pay for a doctor but that if they do the sick pay will retrospectively cover their period of certified leave even if they attend the doctor a number of days into their sick leave. 

“About 40% of people, those least well off in our society, have a medical card and don’t need to pay for the doctor. But I appreciate that there are others who do,” he said. 

We felt that if we were bringing in a system of sick pay, we have to have some form of control, some form of verification. And the obvious one is a doctor’s note. Of course, it is open to employers not to require that, they can accept or trust their employees if they so wish, but in terms of legal requirements a legal minimum, we’re saying that sick pay has to be paid from day one. There’s no waiting days but a doctor’s note is required. 

He added: “Say for example somebody is out sick and it’s the second day or the third day they’re out sick, they go to their doctor, the doctor gives them the sick cert for five days or for a week, they get the full amount. So you don’t need to attend the doctor on day one.” 

Varadkar said the new provisions will provide a minimum level to protection to employees who may have no entitlement to company sick pay schemes.

He said that “roughly speaking about half of workers in Ireland have sick pay and about half don’t”

“I believe this reform is part of the pandemic dividend, the more inclusive economy and fairer society we are going to build once the pandemic is over.

“It’s not right that people feel forced to go to work when they are sick and it’s not good for public health. I know how difficult the past year and a half has been for workers and employers alike.

“We are only now getting back on our feet and are not yet out of woods. By phasing this in over a four-year period, we are taking a balanced approach to plug a well acknowledged gap in our social protections while also responding to the cost concerns of small businesses in the current economic environment,” said Varadkar.

He said the scheme is designed to be fair and affordable with the minimum complexity and administrative burden for employers.

The legislation will expressly state that this does not prevent employers offering better terms or stop unions negotiating for more through a collective agreement, including agreements already in place. 

Around half of employers already provide sick pay, but some workers, including some lower paid employees, do not have access to this support when they fall ill. 

The new sick pay legislation follows similar measures already introduced to enhance employment rights including paternity benefit, parental leave benefit, enhanced maternity benefit, treatment benefit, and the extension of social insurance benefits to the self-employed.

The Tánaiste will publish a regulatory impact assessment on the Sick Leave Bill, which will set out the associated costs and benefits, as well as the proposed arrangements for implementation.

- With reporting by Christina Finn and Rónán Duffy

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    Mute Edward Vanderlee
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 7:51 AM

    Bad batch of illegal narcotics is being made out like a bad batch of pasteurised milk or baby food. These are drugs that have been mixed with anything and everything .
    Step up the war against drugs, don’t appease them.

    110
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    Mute T Paul Kelly
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 9:54 AM

    @Edward Vanderlee:
    How is the war going ?
    50+ years now.

    83
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    Mute Kevin Collins
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 10:36 AM

    @Edward Vanderlee: The war on drugs has been a complete and abject failure and the world has thankfully started to move on to different approaches. It’s not about rewarding or appeasing users and sellers, it’s about reducing harms to society as a whole. You may not particularly like or approve of the introduction of supervised injection centres, but I for one applaud them as a lesser evil than shooting up in alleyways and laneways in broad daylight. Get with the times, boomer.

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    Mute Liam Dunne
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 11:33 AM

    @Kevin Collins: it’s also about Not punishing people who end up mostly through no fault of there own in addiction and or with mental health problems. We wouldn’t jail someone who had cancer but the jails are full of addicts. #childhoodtrauma

    31
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    Mute Edward Vanderlee
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 5:19 PM

    @T Paul Kelly: its not going well but it’s 100% the right thing to do.
    I live a short walk from Thomas Street in Dublin. The amount of addicts in that area is terrible, publicly injecting.
    No society should normalise that.
    Support the addicts and jail the dealers.

    10
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    Mute Declan Doherty
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 5:40 PM

    @Edward Vanderlee: It’s not going well but it’s the right thing to do ? Think about that statement. The answer is counterintuitive but unfortunately we all have to wait for the less agile thinkers like yourself, to catch up with the rest of us. Then we can finally start changing policy, making a difference and saving lives.

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    Mute Edward Vanderlee
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 5:48 PM

    @Declan Doherty: no need to resort to insults now Declan. I’m perfectly agile mentally.
    I saw three people injecting eachother in the entrance of a hotel the other day on my way to work.
    Those poor people. The poor gardai trying to police it too where the courts are a revolving door.
    Nothing ageist about it… that’s not acceptable in any society.

    6
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    Mute Dale Voinz
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 6:27 AM

    I’m in the hostels and there was three deaths in my hostel alone while that batch was going around and I know of good few who died. Why has there been no reporting on that?

    84
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    Mute Denis Rathsallagh Brady
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 6:39 AM

    Would the author of this piece care to find out how many died during that bad batch?

    Or are we too woke to print that kind of thing?

    87
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    Mute Setanta O'Toole
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 10:15 AM

    @Denis Rathsallagh Brady: how is that ‘woke’ in any way? Didn’t they have an article a week or two ago detailing a number of deaths to that point if i recall, do you not believe them or something?

    23
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    Mute Denis Rathsallagh Brady
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 6:14 PM

    @Setanta O’Toole: I obviously didnt read that article but it would be helpful if the figures were put into this article too.

    Ive even given them the number for Merchants Quay Ireland.

    You sure it was deaths due to this bad batch and not lives saved by Naloxone?

    5
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    Mute GVR
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 11:18 AM

    I mean, one knows the risks. Choices

    33
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    Mute T Paul Kelly
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 9:51 AM

    Have to say well done to the department of health who see the value of harm reduction ( eg festival pill testing) – pity the Department of Justice seem to be trapped in the dark ages.

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    Mute Denis Rathsallagh Brady
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 7:38 AM

    Here ill help you out.
    Heres Merchants Quay phone number wont take you a minute to ring them.

    (01) 524 0160

    26
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    Mute Dominic Leleu
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 10:17 AM

    The police forces knows who are the dealers, yet no one is getting locked up

    25
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    Mute alan scott
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 1:33 PM

    @Dominic Leleu: locking up those who do drive is counterproductive. We have overflowing prisons at the present time and you want to add more??? rehabilitation, awareness campaigns though workforces, schools, PLC colleges, 3rd level etc is the way to go.

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    Mute alan scott
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 1:33 PM

    @Dominic Leleu: forget the typo lol meant drugs not drive lol

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    Mute Chris O'Brien
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 6:18 PM

    @alan scott: those are mere bandages… As long as we have a drugs policy from the 1980s the only outcomes will be rich mob bosses and endless, needless death and crime.

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    Mute Shivers
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 7:45 AM

    Need to give it to lecturers and staff at all the third level colleges.

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    Mute Chris O'Brien
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 6:16 PM

    Hilarious that anyone thinks our rightwing government cares about saving lives.

    80th worst healthcare system in the world.

    75k homeless

    Drugs policy from the 1980s, which is enriching gangs and killing the sick.

    Suicide epidemic

    Etc.

    We – as a people – are far more likely to throw babies in a septic tank than help the poor and sick.

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    Mute Tríona Commode
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    Jan 3rd 2024, 8:11 PM

    @Chris O’Brien: Multiple-choice question.
    Are you:
    a. deranged?
    b. delirious?
    c. profoundly delusional?
    d. lying?

    3
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