Chance for an extra public holiday in December

 ·17 Nov 2022

There is still a chance that president Cyril Ramaphosa declares an additional public holiday in December 2022, says Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr (CDH) – and if it happens, bosses will need to know how to pay their workers appropriately.

According to the law firm, four of South Africa’s 12 official public holidays fall over the festive season. These are:

  • 16 December – Day of Reconciliation;
  • 25 December – Christmas Day;
  • 26 December – Day of Goodwill; and
  • 1 January – New Year’s Day.

These are four out of 12 public holidays provided for by the Public Holidays Act 36 of 1994 (Act).

CDH said that the Act provides that “whenever any public holiday falls on a Sunday, the following Monday shall be a public holiday”. The courts have confirmed that where a public holiday falls on a Sunday, it does not cease to be a public holiday on the Sunday, and the Monday following the public holiday is an additional public holiday.

“This year, 25 December falls on a Sunday. This means that Monday, 26 December 2022, will also be a public holiday. However, 26 December 2022 is already a public holiday in terms of the Act,” the firm said.

The 2022 calendar thus gives rise to a situation where the “additional public holiday” on the Monday falls on a day already scheduled as a public holiday. In 2016, when a similar situation prevailed, former president Jacob Zuma declared an additional day a public holiday, that being Tuesday, 27 December 2016.

“This year, there has not yet been confirmation that President Cyril Ramaphosa will declare an additional public holiday on Tuesday, 27 December 2022. However, there is a possibility that this may occur,” CDH said.

If an additional public holiday is declared, as well as in instances where a public holiday falls on a Sunday, questions arise as to whether an employer is obliged to pay an employee for the Sunday and Monday, or only one of these days.

The legal position in this regard is as follows, according to CDH:

If an employee works on a public holiday, the employer must consider the provisions of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act 75 of 1997 (BCEA) when determining the amount to pay the employee.

In particular, the employer must consider whether the public holiday falls on a day on which the employee would ordinarily work.

If the public holiday falls on a day on which the employee would ordinarily work, and the employee works on that public holiday, the employee is entitled to double their ordinary wage for the day or, if greater, the employee’s ordinary wage for the day “plus the amount earned by the employee for the time worked on that day”.

However, if the employee does not work on the public holiday, which falls on a day the employee would ordinarily work, the employee is entitled to their ordinary wage for the day.

If the public holiday falls on a day on which the employee would not ordinarily work, and the employee works on that public holiday, the employee is entitled to their ordinary wage for the day and “the amount earned by the employee for the work performed that day, whether calculated by reference to time worked or any other method”.

“Importantly, the Labour Appeal Court has held that based on an interpretation of the Act, if the public holiday falls on a Sunday, the Sunday remains a public holiday in addition to the following Monday,” CDH said.

In other words, an employer is required to treat both days as a public holiday and to remunerate an employee accordingly, with reference to the abovementioned provisions of the BCEA, depending on whether the employee works on the public holidays.

“It follows that in those instances where the public holiday falls on a Sunday, employees shall enjoy an additional public holiday for the year in question. The same applies in respect of Sunday, 1 January 2023, where both that day, together with the Monday following it, are deemed to be public holidays,” it said.


Read: The number of public holidays in South Africa vs the rest of the world

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