Employment Relations FAQs
factsheets and publications.
       
 
get:
info for employees
info for employers
guide to restructuring
questions and answers
protection in special circumstances
Info for specified groups of employees
find out about:
Surviving Tough Times

Protection in special circumstances - specified groups of employees

 
 
Get a printer-friendly fact sheet of this page.

Who do the arrangements below apply to?

The rules below apply only to “specified groups of employee”, namely employees who work in the following types of employment:

  • cleaning services and food catering services in any place of work
  • laundry services for the education, health or age-related residential care sector
  • orderly services for the health or age-related residential care sector
  • caretaking services for the education sector.

All other employees are subject to different arrangements.

What are “restructuring situations”?

Under the Employment Relations Act 2000, there are some specific types of “restructuring situations” where these rules apply in relation to “specified groups of employees”. These situations are:

  • where their employer sells or transfers the business (or part of it) to another person
  • where their employer contracts another business to perform work that was being performed in-house
  • where their employer is a contractor and they lose a contract to perform services and the contract is granted to another business, or
  • where the business for whom the contractor is performing the work decides to undertake the work in-house.

What rights and obligations do employers and employees have?

In restructuring situations, employees in the specified groups will have a right to transfer to the new employer if:

  • they will no longer be required to do all or part of their work for their existing employer because of the restructuring, and
  • the new employer will perform the same type of work, or work that is substantially similar.

If an employer’s business is to be restructured, the employer must:

  • notify all the employees whose work will be affected
  • give them relevant information about the restructuring, and
  • tell them that they have a choice whether to transfer to the new employer, and the date by which they must make that choice.

The employees will be able to choose whether to transfer to the new employer on their existing terms and conditions. If they so choose, they will become employees of the new employer as if nothing about their work had changed.

Employers, employees and unions can negotiate alternatives to the transfer of employees, such as redeployment within the existing business. Any such alternative arrangements must be in writing.

Employees can also decide not to transfer to the new employer. This may mean, however, that their existing employer makes the employee redundant.

Once employees have transferred, it is up to the new employer to decide how best to manage their resources. This may mean that the new employer makes some employees redundant. If transferred employees are made redundant because of the transfer situation, they may become eligible for redundancy entitlements as follows:

  • Where an employee’s employment agreement specifically deals with the issue of redundancy entitlements in a restructuring situation, this agreement continues to apply after the transfer
  • If the employment agreement is silent on this matter, the employee may be eligible for either:
    • redundancy entitlements agreed with the new employer, or
    • if the employee and the new employer cannot agree, redundancy entitlements determined by the Employment Relations Authority.

Employers and employees and their unions may get help from the Employment Relations Authority.

The Authority will first help the parties through examining the negotiation process followed by the employee and employer, and direct them on what further negotiation process they should use to reach an agreement. If the Authority decides that further negotiation is not warranted, the Authority can set the redundancy entitlements to be provided to the employee.

If the Authority needs to fix the entitlements to be provided to the employee, it will take into account:

  • any other redundancy entitlements contained in the employment agreement
  • the employee’s length of service with their employer and their previous employer
  • how much notice of the redundancy the employee received
  • the employer’s ability to provide redundancy entitlements
  • the likelihood of the employee being able to get another job, and
  • any other relevant matters.

It is also useful for employers and employees to keep these things in mind when they are trying to agree on redundancy entitlements.

back to top

This page was last updated on: 18-Jun-2010 and is current.


home | holidays | pay | good faith | union matters | education & training | fact sheets | publications | parental leave | employment agreements | problem solving | collective bargaining

search our FAQs | sitemap | contact us | about this site | about ers | related sites | govt.nz

©2004 copyright | disclaimer | privacy statement | comment on this website | accessibility

Department of Labour.