Legal updates and opinions
News / News
Employment Equity Amendment Bill 2020
by Jacques van Wyk, Director; Andre van Heerden, Senior Associate; and Thabisa Yantolo, Candidate Attorney
On 20 July 2020 the Minister of Employment and Labour, Thembelani Waltermade Nxesi, (“Minister“) announced that he intends to introduce the Employment Equity Amendment, 2020 Bill (“Bill“) in the National Assembly.
The Bill seeks to amend a number of clauses in the Employment Equity Act 55 of 1998 (“EEA“). The proposed amendments, include, among others, the following changes:
- The removal of the requirement that physiological testing and similar assessments of employees be certified by the Health Professions Council of South Africa;
- The amendment of the definition of ‘people with disabilities’ to align it with the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, 2007;
- The introduction of provision allowing for numerical targets to be implemented for national economic sectors, so as to ensure equitable representation of suitably qualified groups at all occupational levels in the workforce. It is contemplated that different targets may be set at different occupational levels, sub-sectors, regions or other relevant factors;
- The requirement that an employer’s employment equity plan address the numerical targets referred to in (c) above;
- The empowerment of labour inspectors to secure a written undertaking from a ‘designated employer’ regarding the preparation of employment equity plans;
- Clarification that where a representative trade union is present, a ‘designated employer’ must consult only with such union on matters requiring consultation in terms of section 17 of the EEA;
- The removal of the requirement that employers with less than 50 employees, but nonetheless earning in excess of a ‘turnover threshold’, comply with the chapter III of the EEA (i.e. the provisions regarding affirmative action); and
- The requirement that a certificate be issued to employers, confirming their compliance with the provisions of the EEA, as a prerequisite for contracting with the State. Note that this requires an amendment to section 53 of the EEA, which section is yet to become operative.
The Bill containing all the proposed amendments may be accessed at: https://www.gov.za/sites/default/files/gcis_document/202007/43535rg798gon43535.pdf.
Latest News
Sports Betting Opportunity: Mpumalanga Economic Regulator Invites Proposals for Bookmaker Licences
Introduction The Mpumalanga Economic Regulator has published a notice that it intends to invite proposals for Bookmaker Licences in terms [...]
Watt You Need to Know on the draft Electricity Transmission Infrastructure Regulations
by Jonathan Behr, Director, and Robyn Helling, Candidate Attorney The draft regulations to facilitate planning for the procurement and establishment [...]
No Claim? No Problem. Rethinking Creditor Rights in Insolvency Law
A recent judgment handed down in the Johannesburg High Court in Single Destination Engineering (Pty) Ltd and Another v Van [...]
The Balancing Act: The Sharing of Company Information by Exiting Shareholders with Potential Third-Party Purchasers
and Emma Reid, Candidate Attorney INTRODUCTION The default position regarding who can access a company's records and information ("company information") [...]
Court Orders Gauteng Department of Health to Provide Cancer Treatment to Patients Awaiting Care
and Slade van Rooyen - Candidate Attorney and Farah Yassin - Candidate Attorney On 27 March 2025, the Gauteng Local [...]
Allegations of Ethnic Discrimination Require Evidence: the Sagan Principle
and Isabella Keeves - Candidate Attorney In 1979 science communicator and physicist Carl Sagan wrote in his book Broca's Brain [...]