Different rules apply for different employees
when it comes to annual leave.
Entitlements after 12 months
Permanent employees who have worked for 12
months or more have a minimum entitlement to paid leave equal to 4 weeks. The
amount paid for a week’s leave is the greater
of either:
(a) The ordinary weekly pay for that
employee; or
(b) The average weekly pay across the
last year for that employee.
That means, if an employee started work on
$30,000 pa in January, and had an increase in pay in December to $40,000 pa,
and then took a holiday the following January, she would be paid at the higher
rate of pay when on annual leave (even though she accrued most of her
entitlement in the year when her salary was $10,000 pa less).
Similarly, if an employee worked from January
to August as a full time employee, and then you agreed that she could work
part-time, if she took a week’s leave in September her week on annual leave
would be paid at a rate which is equal to her average weekly pay from the last year (even though that is a lot
higher than what she would have received if she had been at work).
Where an employee has an early exit
If employment ends before an employee has
completed 12 months’ service (and they therefore have not yet earned the right
to 4 weeks), they are entitled to a payment equal to 8% of gross earnings
during employment.
Gross earnings includes any payments the
employer has ever made to the employee, so this includes overtime, allowances,
commissions and so on.
Part-timers – what is a “week”?
For casual or part-time permanent workers the
employer and the employee need to agree on what an average working week is. For
example if a person works ten hours per week then they will be entitled to four
weeks of ten hours, or 40 hours of holiday pay.
A part-time worker’s entitlement is also to 4
weeks annual holidays after 12 months of service. The part-time worker would be
paid the greater of either:
(a) The hours they would normally work
during those 4 weeks; or
(b) A larger amount if the average weekly
payment over the last year is greater.
If rosters vary, it will obviously be
concerning to employers if employees take leave only in weeks where their
average hours are high. To minimise any issues around this, employers might
enforce “close down periods” or require leave to be taken at certain times as
part of their employment policies.
Employees on short fixed-term agreements or with
intermittent work patterns
For some casual or short fixed-term workers
there is the option of being able to be paid the 8% of their gross earnings
each pay if it is too difficult to pay them otherwise. If this is the agreement
then it you must separately identify the 8% holiday pay in each pay.
Employees paid on this method are not entitled
to paid time off for annual holidays.
The difficulty with this is that in some jobs,
workers are classified as “casual” when in fact they have regular patterns of
work and are actually part-time permanent workers (for example supermarket
workers or those in hospitality). If workers are permanent part-time employees,
they are entitled to four weeks leave after 12 months service.
If you use the pay-as-you-go method when not
entitled to, or fail to comply with all requirements, then you will be liable
to pay the annual holidays entitlement again, even if you have already paid the
8% each week.
Extra entitlements
The leave entitlements discussed above are
those set as minimum entitlements under statute.
Employers and employees are also free to
negotiate better terms for employees eg extra annual leave over the four weeks.
Employers must provide the greater of the minimum legal entitlement (four
weeks) or what is in the employment agreement.
Alan Knowsley
Employment Lawyer Wellington
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