S.I. No. 375/1979 - Employment Regulation Order (Boot and Shoe Repairing Joint Labour Committee) 1979.


S.I. No. 375 of 1979.

EMPLOYMENT REGULATION ORDER (BOOT AND SHOE REPAIRING JOINT LABOUR COMMITTEE) 1979.

WHEREAS the Labour Court (hereinafter called "the Court") pursuant to Section 43 of the Industrial Relations Act, 1946 , made Employment Regulation Order (Boot and Shoe Repairing Joint Labour Committee) 1978, dated the 28th August, 1978 ( S.I. No. 236 of 1978 ) (hereinafter called "the said Order") fixing the statutory minimum remuneration and regulating the conditions of employment of workers in relation to whom the Boot and Shoe Repairing Joint Labour Committee (hereinafter called "the Committee") operates;

AND WHEREAS the Committee has submitted to the Court a proposal for revoking the said Order;

AND WHEREAS the Committee has also submitted to the Court the proposals set out in the Schedule hereto for fixing the minimum rates of remuneration and regulating the conditions of employment of workers in relation to whom the Committee operates;

AND WHEREAS the provisions of Section 43 of the Act hereby orders as follows:

1. This Order may be cited as the Employment Regulation Order (Boot and Shoe Repairing Joint Labour Committee) 1979.

2. Effect is hereby given to the proposals set out in the Schedule hereto.

3. The provisions set out in the Schedule hereto shall have effect from the 26th November, 1979 and as from that date the said Order shall be revoked.

SCHEDULE.

PART I.

Statutory Minimum Time-Rates for all workers.

SECTION I The Minimum Time-Rate for Managers or Supervisors

Date of

Order

Per week

£63.63

A Manager or Supervisor employed on piece-work must be paid at not less than the statutory minimum time-rate in any case where his/her earnings on piece-work are less than such rate.

SECTION IIThe Minimum Time-Rate for all Workers (other than Managers or Supervisors) shall be:-

Date of Order

£

For Workers of 21 years of age and upwards

58.05

For Workers of 20 and under 21 years of age

52.25

For Workers of 19 and under 20 years of age

46.44

For Workers of 18 and under 19 years of age

40.64

For Workers of 17 and under 18 years of age

34.83

For Workers of 16 and under 17 years of age

29.03

For Workers of 15 and under 16 years of age

23.22

Second Phase

The Second Phase shall operate from 1st April, 1980.

Under this second phase, the basic pay of employees should be increased by 2 per cent together with an increase of 1 per cent for each 1 per cent rise over 7 per cent in the Consumer Price Index in the period mid-November, 1978 to mid-November, 1979 subject to a limit of 5 per cent.

In respect of any increase above 12 per cent in the Consumer Price Index in the period mid-November, 1978 to mid-November, 1979, an amount of 60p for each one percentage point should be paid, subject to a limit of £2.40 per week.

The minimum increase under this phase should be £3 per week.

SECTION III Provision for late Entrants

Persons entering the Trade for the first time having reached the age of 16 years shall not be entitled to demand the minimum rate applicable to their age until they have had six months experience in the trade. During this period they shall receive a commencing rate not less than 60% of the minimum rate otherwise applicable.

PART II.

Operatives on Piece-Work

An employer may, at his discretion, introduce piece-work into his firm for periods of not less than one week at a time. If a worker is paid on the basis of piece-work his rate of pay shall be at least 25% above the general minimum time-rate. If a worker who is normally employed on piece-work ceases to be so employed he shall be paid at a rate of not less than the general minimum time-rate which in these circumstances shall be the piece-work basis time rate.

PART III.

SECTION I Normal working hours and overtime rates

The normal number of hours to be worked by workers in relation to whom the Committee operates shall be as follows:—

Normal Hours

Maximum Hours

Workers between 15 and 16 years of age in any week not exceeding

37½

40

Workers over 16 years of age in any week not exceeding

40

Workers over 16 years and under 18 years the maximum number of hours which may be worked shall be governed by the provisions of the Protection of Young Persons (Employment) Act, 1977 .

SECTION IIThe Minimum Rate for Overtime to apply in respect of Hours Worked by a Worker, whether employed on Time-Work or on Piece-Work, in excess of the declared normal number of hours of work shall be as follows:-

For the first four hours of overtime on any day one and a half times the minimum rate otherwise applicable i.e. time-and-a-half. Double time thereafter.

SECTION III Workers who qualify for payment under the Holidays (Employees) Act, 1973 shall be paid for all time worked on a Public Holiday, at a rate of not less than three times the normal rate, subject to a minimum payment for four hours, or at a rate of not less than twice the normal rate plus one day in lieu, subject to the provision that such workers will be remunerated at not less than that provided by the Holidays (Employees) Act, 1973 .

PART IV.

DEFINITION OF WORKERS.

SECTION IA Manager or Supervisor (Male or Female)

A Manager or Supervisor (male of female) is a worker (a) who experiences sole supervising authority over all workers exceeding three in number (excluding the said Manager or Supervisor) working in the same shop or department or (b) who (whether working alone or with any other worker) under the terms of his/her employment, in addition to any work which may be required of him/her, fits up or supervises the fitting-up of the work and has control of the repairing or making and the technical direction thereof.

SECTION II Trade

The above statutory Minimum Remuneration shall be payable subject to the provisions of the Industrial Relations Act, 1946 , and of this Schedule, to all workers specified in this Schedule in respect of any time during which they are employed in any Branch of the Trade specified in the Trade Board's (Boot and Shoe Repairing) Order, 1919, that is to say, the repairing wherever carried on of boots, shoes, slippers and all kinds of footwear, including the making of bespoke handsewn riveted or pegged footware but excluding the manufacture of footwear on a large scale, the repairing of saddlery and leather goods other than footwear and the retailing of footwear.

PART V.

WAITING TIME.

A worker must be paid not less than the appropriate Minimum Rate in respect of all time during which he is present on the employer's premises unless the employer can prove that such worker was so present (a) without the employer's consent, express or implied, or (b) for some purpose unconnected with his work and other than waiting for work to be given to him to perform or unless the worker was present or (c) during meal hours in a room or place in which no work is being done.

A worker employed on piece-work is deemed during "waiting time" to have been employed at the General Minimum Time-Rate applicable.

PART VI.

ANNUAL HOLIDAYS.

Those workers who do not have 17 days Annual Leave shall be entitled to a total of 17 days leave, the additional day(s) to be taken during the currency of the National Understanding i.e. by 30th September, 1980.

PART VII.

SERVICE PAY.

Male and Female Workers who have been in continuous employment with the one employer to be granted Service Pay as follows:—

5 years service—-£0.50 per week

10 years service—-£1.00 per week

15 years service—-£1.50 per week

20 years service—-£2.00 per week.

GIVEN under the Official Seal of the Labour Court this 22nd day of

November, 1979.

Signed JAMES G. McCAULEY.

A person authorised under Section 18 of the Industrial

Relations Act, 1946, to authenticate the Seal of the Court.

EXPLANATORY NOTE.

This Instrument fixes new minimum rates of pay and conditions of employment as from 26th November, 1979 for workers employed in the Boot and Shoe Repairing Trade. It is made by the Labour Court on the recommendation of the Boot and Shoe Repairing Joint Labour Committee.