Showing posts with label Latest Updates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Latest Updates. Show all posts

Andhra Pradesh Releases Draft Code on Social Security Rules, 2026

1. Background & Legal Context

The Government of Andhra Pradesh has published the Draft Code on Social Security (Andhra Pradesh) Rules, 2026 via G.O.Rt.No.43 dated 23.02.2026 from the Labour, Factories, Boilers & Insurance Medical Services (Lab.II) Department.

These draft rules are issued:

  • Under powers in sections 154 and 156 of the Code on Social Security, 2020 (Central Act 36 of 2020)
  • In view of:
    • Central Code on Social Security, 2020 (notified 29.09.2020)
    • Appointed day 21.11.2025 notified by Central Government (S.O. 5319(E))
    • Draft Central Social Security Rules, 2025 (GSR 935(E) dated 30.12.2025)

They supersede earlier State rules under:

  • Employees’ Compensation Act, 1923
  • Maternity Benefit Act, 1961
  • Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972
  • Unorganised Workers’ Social Security Act, 2008

The draft is open for objections & suggestions for 45 days from the date the Gazette copy is made available to the public. Submissions can be made online:

  • Labour Dept Portal: https://labour.ap.gov.in
  • Email: aplabourcodes2026@gmail.com

2. Scope & Key Definitions

2.1 Short Title & Commencement

  • Called “The Code on Social Security (Andhra Pradesh) Rules, 2026”.
  • Will come into force from the date of publication in the Official Gazette.

2.2 Important Definitions for HR

Some key defined terms that matter for HR & Compliance:

  • “Assessing Officer” – Gazetted officer appointed by State Government for assessment of building & construction cess.
  • “Cess collector” – Officer appointed to collect cess under Chapter VIII of the Code.
  • “Competent authority” – Authority appointed under section 91 (Employees’ Compensation) and section 56 (Gratuity disputes).
  • “Inspector-cum-Facilitator” – Appointed under section 122; responsible for inspection and guidance.
  • “Career centre (regional)” – State‑notified career/employment centre for vacancy reporting, returns etc.
  • “Fund” – AP Building & Other Construction Workers Welfare Fund or Social Security Fund under section 141.
  • “Register of women employees” – Specific register in Form XX.

Implication: HR teams must be familiar with these authorities and forms—they are the key contact points for disputes, registration, cess, maternity, gratuity etc.


3. Digital Registration & Cancellation of Establishments (Rule 3)

3.1 New Registration Process

Every unregistered establishment must:

  • Apply electronically using Form-I of the Occupational Safety, Health & Working Conditions (AP) Rules, 2026 via the State Labour Dept portal.
  • Use this common form for registration under multiple labour codes.
  • Provide:
    • Establishment details
    • Employer identity & address proofs
    • PAN / other unique IDs, which may be verified online.

Timeline & Deeming Provision

  • Registration certificate must be issued immediately, and in any case within 7 days of submission of complete application.
  • If not issued within 7 days, registration is deemed granted and a certificate shall be auto‑generated.

Exceptional Situations

  • State Government may temporarily dispense with electronic registration (e.g., certain classes/areas) and allow physical submission, via notification.

3.2 For Establishments Already Registered under Other Labour Laws

  • Employers must update particulars on the State Labour portal within the period specified by a government notification.

3.3 Expiry of Registration

  • A registration expires automatically if no compliance is reported for 24 months using that registration number.
  • It can be revived upon application on the portal.

3.4 Cancellation of Registration

  • If registration obtained by wrong information, it may be cancelled after:
    • 30‑day show cause notice (served electronically or otherwise).

3.5 Employer Obligations

  • Quote registration number on all documents & correspondence under the Code, schemes, rules and regulations.
  • Update any change in particulars on the portal within 30 days.
  • For closure: apply for cancellation of registration online with complete details and status of all contributions & dues.
    • Application is allowed only if all returns filed, all dues paid, and self‑certification is attached.
    • Must be decided within 90 days of complete application.

HR Action Point:
Ensure your establishments data is fully updated on the AP Labour Portal and monitor compliance activity so that your registration does not lapse after 24 months of inactivity.


4. Unorganised Workers Social Security & BOCW Welfare (Rules 4–12)

4.1 Andhra Pradesh Unorganised Workers Social Security Board (Rule 4–8)

Tenure & Limit on Terms

  • Non‑ex officio members: 3‑year term, eligible for re‑nomination, but maximum 2 terms total.

Representation Structure

  • 7 members from unorganised workers
  • 7 from employers of unorganised workers
  • 5 eminent persons (labour welfare, management, finance, law, admin)
  • 2 MLAs (nominated via Speaker)
  • 10 from concerned departments

With mandatory representation (within the 7 worker reps) for:

  • SC, ST, Minorities, and Women.

Vacancy, Resignation & Removal

  • Members can resign by letter to State Government.
  • Vacancies filled for the remainder of term through nomination.
  • Members must abstain from meetings if removal proceedings are pending; Government’s decision on disqualification/removal is final.

4.2 AP Building and Other Construction Workers Welfare Board (Rules 9–10)

The Board must formulate schemes to:

  1. Pay premiums for Group Insurance for beneficiaries.
  2. Provide educational schemes for children of beneficiaries.
  3. Support medical expenses for treatment of major ailments of beneficiaries or dependents.

Central Government may also formulate additional welfare schemes for building workers in a State if required.

4.3 Governance: Meetings, Quorum, Allowances (Rule 11–12)

  • Minimum 3 meetings per year for both the Unorganised Workers Board and BOCW Board.
  • 15 days’ notice for ordinary meetings (with agenda & brief notes); shorter notice allowed for emergency meetings.
  • Quorum:
    • 10 members for Unorganised Workers Board
    • 4 members for BOCW Board
  • Provision to appoint substitutes to attend meetings on behalf of members, subject to:
    • Written authority
    • Approval by Chairperson
    • Member remains liable for any misappropriation or misapplication by substitute.
  • Minutes to be circulated within 4 weeks and confirmed in next meeting.
  • Non‑official members entitled to TA/DA at State Government officer rates; MLAs as per MLA rules; Ministers as per their own service rules.

HR Relevance:
For construction‑heavy employers and contractors in AP, these Boards are the primary entities for BOCW registration, cess utilisation and welfare benefits.


5. Employees’ State Insurance Society (Rule 13–16)

5.1 Creation of State ESIS Society

State Government may establish an Employees’ State Insurance Society as a managerial and healthcare body. It will have:

  • Governing Body
  • Executive Committee
  • Chief Executive Officer
  • Secretariat

Society to be registered under applicable State Societies Registration Act & Public Trust Act.

5.2 Governing Body Composition

Includes:

  • Chief Secretary – Chairperson
  • ACS/Principal Secretary/Secretary (Labour/Health) – Vice‑Chairperson
  • ACS/Principal Secretary/Secretary (Health/Labour) – Member
  • ACS/Principal Secretary/Secretary (Finance) – Member
  • Director, ESIS – CEO‑cum‑Member Secretary
  • ESIC nominees
  • 3 Employers’ reps
  • 3 Employees’ reps
  • Regional Director, ESIC
  • State Medical Officer, ESIC

5.3 Executive Committee & Meetings

  • Executive Committee chaired by ACS/Principal Secretary/Secretary overseeing ESIS.
  • Quorum: 1/3 or at least 3 of filled posts.
  • Governing Body: meets at least twice a year.
  • Executive Committee: at least quarterly.

5.4 Budgeting & Accounts

  • Budget to be submitted by 10th December every year.
  • Accounts audited by CAG annually.
  • Financial year: 1 April – 31 March.
  • Financial statements to be ready by 31 May, and annual report + accounts to ESIC within 6 months of year‑end.

5.5 Other Key Points

  • Society may sue or be sued through CEO or appointed member.
  • Employees will be on deemed deputation from Govt/PSU/ESIC with pension liabilities resting with parent organisation.

HR Angle:
For ESI‑covered establishments, this Society will influence service quality of ESIS hospitals/dispensaries, timelines for reimbursements, and general administration.


6. Gratuity – Detailed Operational Rules (Rules 17–21 + Forms I–VII)

6.1 Gratuity for Minors (Rule 17)

Where gratuity is payable to a minor nominee or heir, the Competent Authority must invest the amount in a term deposit with SBI or any nationalised bank until the minor attains majority.

6.2 Nomination (Rule 18, Form I)

  • Nomination must be given in Form I, in duplicate, within 90 days:
    • Existing employees (1+ year service) – within 90 days of commencement of rules.
    • New employees – within 90 days of completing 1 year.
  • Employer must:
    • Verify service particulars
    • Return one attested copy to employee within 30 days
    • Retain the other. citeturn3search1
  • If employee has no family at nomination time, a fresh nomination is mandatory within 90 days of acquiring family status.
  • Modifications in nomination (e.g., nominee predeceases employee) also through Form I.
  • Nominations take effect from date of receipt by employer.

6.3 Claiming Gratuity (Rule 19, Forms II–VII)

Application by Employee / Nominee / Legal Heir

  • Employee: within 30 days of gratuity becoming payable (can apply 30 days before known superannuation/retirement date).
  • Fixed‑term employees: eligible if they complete 1 year; period > 6 months is rounded off to 1 full year.
  • Nominee: within 30 days of gratuity becoming payable.
  • Legal heir: within 1 year.
  • Delayed applications must be accepted if sufficient cause is shown; delay alone cannot render claim invalid.

Employer’s Decision & Timelines

Within 15 days of application:

  • If admissible issue Form III specifying amount & payment date (within 30 days of application).
  • If not admissible issue Form III with reasons and copy to Competent Authority.

Gratuity must be paid via Demand Draft or bank transfer.

Disputes & Appeals

  • If employer:
    • Refuses nomination,
    • Disagrees with amount, or
    • Fails to issue notice in time,
      Employee/nominee/legal heir may apply to Competent Authority in Form IV within 180 days (extendable).
  • Competent Authority:
    • Issues notice in Form V to both parties, conducts hearing, may summon witnesses, and records findings.
    • If gratuity is payable, issues Form VI to employer directing payment within 30 days.
  • Appeal:
    • To Appellate Authority within prescribed time, attaching Competent Authority’s order.
    • Appellate Authority decision communicated to both parties; Competent Authority modifies its direction accordingly and may issue revised Form VI with modified amount and 15‑day payment timeline.
  • If employer still doesn’t pay, employee/nominee/legal heir may seek recovery through Form VII, which allows recovery under section 129.

6.4 Management of Gratuity Trust (Rule 20)

For exempted establishments with approved Gratuity Fund (Section 57(2)):

  • Board of Trustees must be formed with equal representation of employers & employees.
  • Employer serves as Chairperson but must maintain arm’s length in decisions.
  • Board meets at least once every three months.
  • Governance conditions (tenure, elections, quorum, records, etc.) shall be as per the approved Gratuity Fund.

Any interpretation disputes under this rule are to be referred to Government/Commissioner of Labour; their interpretation is binding.


7. Maternity Benefit – Detailed Provisions (Rules 22–27 + Forms VIII–XII, XX)

7.1 Medical Certificates & Proofs (Rule 22, Form VIII)

Pregnancy, delivery, miscarriage, MTP, tubectomy and related illness can be certified by:

  • Registered Medical Practitioner
  • Accredited Social Health Activist (ASHA)
  • Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANM)

Additional acceptable documents include:

  • Birth certificate from municipality/gram panchayat
  • Extract from birth/death register
  • Certificate by Gram Pradhan / Village Administrative Officer / Municipal Officer, etc.

7.2 Claim Notice & Payment (Form IX)

  • Woman must give notice for maternity benefit in Form IX, including nominee details under section 62.
  • Employer must:
    • Pay maternity benefit & other amounts to the woman, or if she dies, to her nominee/legal representative.
    • Deposit payment with Competent Authority within 2 months of death if there is doubt about rightful payee.
  • Medical bonus to be paid with the second instalment of maternity benefit.
  • Wages under section 65 (miscarriage/illness etc.) to be paid within 48 hours of producing Form X.

7.3 Nursing Breaks (Rule 23)

  • Two breaks of 15 minutes each for nursing up to child’s age of 15 months.
  • Extra travel time of up to 15 minutes to/from creche or place where child is left.
  • Any dispute over extra time to Competent Authority.

7.4 Creche Facilities (Rule 24)

Mandatory for establishments with 50+ employees:

  • To provide and maintain a creche for children under 6 years.
  • Within 1 km of establishment; relaxation allowed for industrial parks/areas with common creche.
  • At least 10 sq. ft per child; safe, rainproof building, fenced play area, proper hygiene.
  • Working hours aligned with employee shift patterns.
  • Staffed by a woman with midwifery/creche training + 1 ayah per 10 children.
  • Must provide cots, beds, sheets, blankets, toys, first-aid, kitchen, milk, refreshments, toilets, wash basins, etc.

Creche Allowance (Instead of Physical Creche)

  • Where there is a sole negotiating union / council, it may agree with employer to give creche allowance instead of on-site creche for eligible employees (women, widowers, single parents with children < 6 years).
  • Where no such union/council exists, majority of employees may similarly agree.
  • Amount not less than 500 per month per child, or higher as notified by Central Government; applicable for up to 2 children (with exception for multiple births in second childbirth).

7.5 Gross Misconduct & Appeals (Rule 25)

Acts constituting “gross misconduct” (relevant for deprivation of maternity benefit under Section 68):

  • Wilful destruction of employer’s property
  • Assault on superior/co‑worker at workplace
  • Criminal offence involving moral turpitude with conviction
  • Theft/fraud/dishonesty related to employer’s business or property
  • Wilful non‑observance of safety measures / interference with safety devices or fire‑fighting equipment

Appeal against deprivation of maternity benefit to Competent Authority in Form X.

7.6 Complaints & Duties of Inspector‑cum‑Facilitator (Rules 26–27)

  • Complaints regarding withheld benefits or wrongful dismissal: to Inspector‑cum‑Facilitator in Form XI.
  • Inspector must:
    • Examine employer records & employees
    • Issue orders within 45 days if benefit is improperly withheld.
  • Appeals against Inspector’s decision go to Competent Authority (also Form XI).
  • Inspector must check compliance with key provisions: sections 59, 62(5),(6), 64–67, 69, 71 and previous irregularities.

Register of Women Employees (Form XX)

Employers must maintain detailed Register of Women Employees capturing: appointment, leave, notices, proofs, payments of maternity benefit, bonus, leave wages, nominee details, etc.


8. Records, Registers & Unified Annual Return (Rule 28, Form XIII)

8.1 Registers to Maintain

Every employer must maintain:

  • Register of employees – Form I of AP Code on Wages Rules, 2026
  • Attendance / muster – Form IX of AP Code on Wages Rules, 2026
  • Wages/overtime/advances/fines/deductions – Form IV of AP Code on Wages Rules, 2026
  • Register of women employees – Form XX under these rules

Registers may be electronic or physical, in English + Hindi or local majority language, and must be kept updated.

  • Preserve all registers for 5 calendar years from last entry.
  • Produce them on demand to Inspector‑cum‑Facilitator.

8.2 Unified Annual Return – Form XIII

  • Employers to file Unified Annual Return (online) in Form XIII on State portal by 1st February each year for the preceding year.
  • In case of sale, abandonment or discontinuance of establishment:
    • File additional unified return within 1 month of sale/abandonment or 4 months of discontinuance, covering period since last calendar year‑end.

The return consolidates requirements under Wages, OSH, IR & Social Security Codes into a single integrated filing.


9. Offences & Compounding (Rule 29, Form XIV)

  • State Government may authorise a Compounding Officer to handle offences under section 138.
  • Compounding process:
    1. Compounding notice in Form XIV (Part I) issued electronically.
    2. Employer has 15 days to pay composition amount and submit Part III.
    3. If paid Compounding Officer issues Composition Certificate (Part IV) within 10 days.
    4. If not paid Prosecution will be initiated for the offence mentioned in the notice.

10. Employment Information & Monitoring (Rules 32–33, 68–70)

10.1 Career Centres (Rule 32)

  • State Government may establish or notify career centres or convert existing employment exchanges into career centres; may also partner with institutions, local bodies, or private bodies.
  • Functions:
    • Collect job seeker & vacancy data
    • Provide career counselling & vocational guidance
    • Organise job fairs/drives
    • Conduct employment surveys & employability enhancement activities.

10.2 Reporting of Vacancies (Rule 33, Form XV)

Public Sector:

  • All public sector establishments must report vacancies to career centre before filling them.

Private Sector:

  • Private establishments (or specific classes) will report from date notified by State Government.

Timelines & Modes:

  • Use Form XV, via writing/email/digital mode.
  • To regional Career Centre at least 15 days before last date for applications.
  • For all‑India or multi‑State recruitment also report to Central career centre / digital portal.
  • Career Centre must allot unique vacancy ID and inform employer within 3 working days (or up to 7 days for NE States).

10.3 Employment Information Return – Form XVII

  • Employer to file Form XVII (EIR) within 30 days of end of financial year with Regional Career Centre.
  • EIR includes:
    • Total manpower (including contractual, outsourced)
    • Vacancies occurred, reported & filled
    • Manpower shortages and skill gaps
    • Estimated manpower requirements for next year

11. Employees’ Compensation (Rules 34–48, Forms XVI–XIX)

Key HR‑relevant points:

  • Interest on delayed compensation – 12% p.a. simple interest if not paid within 30 days (or rate as notified by Central Government).
  • Funeral expenses amount fixed at 20,000, subject to change by State notification.
  • Claim applications to Competent Authority in Form XVI, can be by post or electronically.
  • Venue of proceedings: area where accident occurred / employee (or dependants) reside / employer’s registered office.
  • Transfer of records/money between Competent Authorities handled through Forms XVIII & XIX and electronic/banking modes.
  • Employer must inform each employee in writing and electronically about their rights under Employee’s Compensation provisions at the time of employment.

12. Exemptions – Eligibility Conditions (Rule 49)

An establishment seeking exemption under Section 143 must:

  • Provide benefits substantially similar or superior to those under:
    • Chapter III schemes or
    • Chapter IV benefits (as applicable).
  • Apply electronically or otherwise as prescribed.

13. What HR & Employers in AP Should Do Now

Here’s how you can translate the draft into concrete internal steps:

  1. Registration & Portal Readiness
    • Check if your establishment details on AP Labour Portal are accurate and live.
    • Map responsibility for timely returns & updates to a specific HR/compliance owner.
  2. Gratuity & PF–Linked Practices
    • Ensure Form I, II, III, IV–VII workflows for gratuity are built into HRIS or manual SOPs.
    • For any in‑house gratuity trust, review governance vs. Rule 20 and Board of Trustees structure.
  3. Maternity Policy & Creche
    • Align your maternity policy, including:
      • Eligibility checks
      • Form VIII/IX usage
      • Payment timelines
      • Nursing breaks & creche/allowance.
    • For 50+ employee locations, plan for on‑site creche or creche allowance agreement as per Rule 24.
  4. Registers & Records
    • Integrate Form XX (Register of Women Employees) and ensure other registers/records are maintained for 5 years.
    • Prepare to file Unified Annual Return – Form XIII online by 1st February each year.
  5. Vacancy Reporting & Employment Returns
    • If you fall under public sector/ notified private category, set a process for:
      • Reporting vacancies in Form XV,
      • Filing Form XVII yearly to Regional Career Centre.
  6. Safety & Compensation
    • Inform all employees of their Employee’s Compensation rights in writing and electronically at joining.
    • Ensure compensation and funeral expense limits are understood by HR and line managers.

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Andhra Pradesh Releases Draft Code on Wages Rules, 2026

As per Draft Notification issued vide G.O.Rt.No.39, dated 13.02.2026 by the Labour, Factories, Boilers & Insurance Medical Services Dept.


🔰 Introduction

With the enforcement of the Code on Wages, 2019 across India, the Government of Andhra Pradesh has issued the Draft Code on Wages (AP) Rules, 2026 to align state‑level wage regulations with the central framework.
These draft rules replace long‑standing provisions under:

  • AP Payment of Wages Rules, 1937
  • AP Minimum Wages Rules, 1960

and bring all wage‑related matters under one unified code.

Objections/suggestions may be submitted within 45 days from the date of publication through the official Labour Dept. portal or e‑mail.


1️ Chapter I – Preliminary & Definitions

Scope & Commencement

  • Applicable across the entire State of Andhra Pradesh.
  • Comes into force from date of publication in the Official Gazette.

Key Definitions

The Code provides clarity on several operational terms crucial for HR & compliance, including:

  • Authority (for claims) – appointed under Sec. 45
  • Appellate Authority – under Sec. 49
  • Inspector‑cum‑Facilitator – under Sec. 51
  • Committee – for minimum wage fixation
  • Family – expanded to include dependent parents & in‑laws
  • Skill Levels – Unskilled, Semi‑Skilled, Skilled, Highly Skilled

These definitions serve as the foundation for wage categorization, inspections, and dispute resolutions.


2️ Chapter II – Minimum Wages

2.1 Criteria for Fixing Minimum Wages

The state government must use scientifically‑defined parameters:

  1. Standard working‑class family = 1 earner + spouse + 2 children
  2. Caloric requirement = 2700 calories/day per consumption unit
  3. 66 meters of cloth per family/year
  4. House rent = 10% of food & clothing
  5. Fuel, electricity, etc. = 20% of minimum wage
  6. Education, medical, contingencies = 25% of minimum wage

These guidelines ensure that wage fixation is rational, transparent, and inflation‑responsive.


2.2 Calculation of Daily, Hourly & Monthly Wages

  • Daily Hourly: divide by 8
  • Daily Monthly: multiply by 26
  • Rounding rules: ≥0.5 round up, <0.5 ignore

For 5‑day week organisations (common in corporates), hourly rate becomes the basis for calculating daily wage.


2.3 Skill Categorisation Committee

A technical committee reviews and updates occupational skill levels.

Members include:

  • Additional Commissioner/Joint Commissioner of Labour (Chairperson)
  • Labour Department officials
  • Director of Employment
  • CEO, AP Skill Development Corporation
  • Employer/Employee representatives
  • Technical wage experts

The committee is empowered to modify, add or delete entries in the official “Schedule.”


2.4 Schedule of Occupations

A vast list of over 1000 job roles across unskilled to highly skilled categories is included.

Examples:

Unskilled: Helpers, Mazdoors, Cleaners, Watchmen, Loaders
Semi‑Skilled: Fitters’ helpers, Firemen, Trolley operators
Skilled: Electricians, Carpenters, Welders, Drivers, Masons
Highly Skilled: Foremen, Senior Mechanics, Mining Supervisors

This ensures AP industries have consistent classification for wage payment.


3️ Chapter II – Working Hours, Rest, and Overtime

3.1 Working Hours

  • Daily working hours and spread‑over will be defined by the Commissioner of Labour through general/special orders.

3.2 Weekly Rest

  • One day of rest per week (Sunday traditionally).
  • For less‑than‑6‑day weeks, both Saturday & Sunday become rest days.
  • Prior notice to employees is mandatory.

3.3 Substituted Rest Day

  • If an employee works on rest day, a substituted rest day must be given.
  • Overtime applies.
  • Must not work for more than 10 consecutive days without a rest day.

3.4 Night Shifts

  • Day counted from end of the shift, not from midnight.

4️ Chapter III – Payment of Wages

4.1 Wage Period

  • Monthly wage period is permitted as the “longer wage period.”

4.2 Deductions

  • Total deductions cannot exceed 50% of wages.
  • Excess deduction is carried to next wage cycle.

4.3 Fines

  • Prior approval from Deputy Commissioner of Labour required.
  • Notice of fines must be displayed in English & Telugu.

4.4 Deductions for Loss/Damage

  • Employer must explain in writing
  • Employee must be given opportunity to respond

4.5 Advances &Loans

  • Recovery installments capped at 50% of wages.

5️ Chapter IV – Advisory Board & Committees

This chapter establishes procedures for:

  • State Advisory Board composition
  • Meeting rules, quorum, voting, minutes
  • Appointment of committees under Section 8
  • Term of office (2 years), resignation, disqualification

The Board includes:

  • Employer representatives
  • Employee representatives
  • Independent professionals
  • State Government officials

One‑third of all members must be women.


6️ Chapter V – Payment of Dues & Claims

6.1 Nomination (Form VII)

Employees must nominate family members for receiving dues in case of death.

6.2 Un-disbursed Dues

If dues remain unpaid:

  • Employer deposits amount with Deputy Commissioner of Labour
  • Public notice issued for claimants
  • After 7 years, amount transferred under AP Labour Welfare Fund Act

6.3 Claims Procedure

  • Claims can be filed in Form II
  • Authority issues notice via Form VIII
  • Ex‑parte decision possible if employer does not appear

6.4 Appeals

  • Filed through Form III
  • Employer must deposit awarded amount before appeal is admitted

7️ Chapter VI – Registers & Wage Slip

Employers must maintain:

Mandatory Registers (physical or electronic):

  1. Form I – Employee Register
  2. Form IV – Wages, Overtime, Fines & Deductions
  3. Form IX – Attendance & Muster Roll

Registers must be preserved for 5 years.

Wage Slip (Form V)

  • Must be issued before wage payment
  • Can be emailed / digitally generated

8️ Chapter VII – Miscellaneous Provisions

8.1 Contract Labour – Principal Employer Responsibility

Principal employer must ensure:

  • Payment of wages
  • Payment of minimum bonus if contractor fails

8.2 Annual Returns

Employers must file annual returns electronically through OSHWC Code formats.


📌 Summary – Why These Rules Matter for Employers & HR

These draft rules:

Bring uniform wage standards across AP
Strengthen compliance obligations for employers
Require better record‑keeping & digital documentation
Provide stronger protection to contract labour
Simplify wage claim and appeal processes
Enable updated skill‑based wage structuring

As a Manager–HR, these rules directly impact:

  • Wage structuring
  • Payroll compliance
  • Contract labour management
  • HR documentation practices
  • Internal audit & labour inspections

  

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