Legal updates and opinions
News / News
CCMA speaks again on mandatory vaccination policies
Mandatory vaccination policies in the workplace
Hot off the heels of a number of awards by the CCMA which upheld mandatory vaccination policies in the workplace, the CCMA has recently declared mandatory vaccination policies to be unconstitutional.
The facts of this case are as follows –
- The employee was employed as Senior Inventory Controller. The employer supplies Cardio, Endocrine and Neurological equipment to hospitals and other end users.
- On 22 July 2021, the employer communicated its mandatory vaccination policy. In terms of clause 6, it was a requirement for all employees to vaccinate and clause 10 stated that “[e]mployees who refuse to be vaccinated will be in breach of the Company Policy and their services may then be terminated for operational reasons”.
- After the refusal of the employee to vaccinate, the employer took the decision to retrench her.
- The employee referred a dismissal dispute related to operational requirements to the Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration (the CCMA) related to the non-compliance with the employer’s mandatory vaccination policy.
- The CCMA was therefore called upon to determine whether the dismissal of the Applicant was fair or not.
Mandatory vaccination policies are unconstitutional
The CCMA held that the dismissal of the Employee was substantively unfair and in the words of the senior commissioner “in fact unconstitutional“.
The commissioner was of the view that mandatory vaccination policies are unconstitutional and that the rule in respect of mandatory vaccination was unreasonable.
Despite the nobility of the declaration by the CCMA, only the High Court can pronounce on the unconstitutionality of a policy and the said unconstitutionality has to be confirmed by the Constitutional Court. Constitutionality simply does not fall within the purview of the CCMA.
Furthermore, on 22 June 2022, the Minister of Employment and Labour published the Code of Practice: Managing Exposure to SARS-CoV 2 in the Workplace, Government Notice No. 46596 (the “Code“) which remains applicable. In terms of this Code, employers may continue developing and enforcing mandatory vaccination policies. This is subject to employers firstly conducting a Risk Assessment and concluding a Plan in terms of which employees identified in the Risk Assessment must be vaccinated.
It is the outcome of the Risk Assessment that directs the Employer’s decision on whether or not to have a mandatory vaccination policy in place, in order to ensure the safety of their workplace. The obligation to ensure safety of the workplace stems from the Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA) read together with Regulations to the OHSA and the Code itself.
Whilst the Award raises interesting and important questions surrounding the constitutionality of vaccination policies, in the face of the Code, there is nothing in the law as it currently stands that prohibits employers from having and enforcing mandatory vaccination policies in respect of their individual workplaces.
Read more about compulsory vaccinations after the state of emergency is lifted.
Latest News
A new Covid 19 code: has anything really changed?
by Anastasia Vatalidis, Head of Labour & Employment, Sandile Tom, Director, and Benedict Ngobeni, Candidate Attorney On the heels of [...]
Affected persons are invited – again – to provide comments on The Code of Conduct for The Banking Association of SA
On 24 June 2022, the Information Regulator of South Africa (Information Regulator) published a notice in terms of section 61(2) [...]
Gerrymandering Healthcare? Certificate of need
The term "gerrymander" is used primarily in the context of shifting the boundaries or borders of voting constituencies in order [...]
Business Rescue Proceedings in South Africa
Business Rescue Proceedings A company should commence business rescue proceedings at the first signs of it being financially distressed, within [...]
To interdict or not to interdict: Parties continue to fall in the same pitfalls
Securing an interdict It has long been held, per Loomcraft Fabrics CC v Nedbank Ltd and another [1996] 1 All [...]
Can a Business Rescue Practitioner and a Curator Bonis hold hands?
The recent High Court judgment in National Director of Public Prosecutions v Knoop N.O and others; National Director of Public [...]
