Employment and Labour welcomes Constitutional Court judgment on domestic workers

The Department of Employment and Labour has welcomed the judgment by the Constitutional Court affirming the right of domestic work to be covered for injuries sustained in employment.

The judgment by the apex court affirmed the earlier decision last year by the High Court which found the exclusion unconstitutional. In the judgement, the court found that excluding domestic workers from the definition of employee excluded them from the “social security benefits provided for under the Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act”.

The court called domestic workers “unsung heroines in this country and globally” whose “profession enables economically active members of society to prosper and pursue their careers”

“Prior to the high court judgment, the Department had already started a process of amending the act to include domestic workers under the definition of employee which would enable them to receive the benefits under COID. The High Court and the Constitutional Court judgements have by operation of the law fast-tracked the inclusion of domestic workers in the current COID Act.

“This is also the reason why the department agreed to the initial agreement that was presented in the high court and subsequently made an order of the court that has now been affirmed by the Constitutional Court,” said Director General Thobile Lamati.

The Bill amending the act was launched in September and central to the changes is the inclusion of domestic workers under COIDA.

On the order that the inclusion be retrospective to April 27, 1994, Lamati said the   Department anticipated this judgement and have already looked at the ways of implementing this aspect.

“We recognize that this aspect has far-reaching implications and therefore it is incumbent upon the department to work out the best way to address this part of the judgment and to do so in a way that addresses all the other issues raised by the courts,” said Lamati.

“We agree entirely with the court that domestic workers face a multitude of challenges including racism, sexism, gender inequality and class stratification.

“It is one of the reasons that the department has been a driver to other interventions to improve the lives of domestic workers like the sectoral determination that seek to set minimum wages for domestic workers. Even with the payment of workers during the pandemic, we have called on employers of domestic workers to ensure that they apply on their behalf so that they were not left behind,” Lamati said.

Given the fact that the employers of domestic workers need to contribute to the Fund, the department will issue a directive to this effect and also on how the Department will deal with the retrospective aspect in as far as contributions are concerned.

For media enquiries:
Musa Zondi
Acting Departmental Spokesperson
067 426 4190 

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