S.I. No. 195/1957 - Employment Regulation Order (Messengers (Limerick City) Joint Labour Committee), 1957.


S.I. No. 195 of 1957.

EMPLOYMENT REGULATION ORDER (MESSENGERS (LIMERICK CITY) JOINT LABOUR COMMITTEE), 1957.

WHEREAS pursuant to the provisions of Section 43 of the Industrial Relations Act, 1946 (hereinafter called " the Act ") the Messengers (Limerick City) Joint Labour Committee (hereinafter called " the Committee ") has submitted to the Labour Court (hereinafter called " the Court ") the proposals set out in the Schedule hereto for fixing the minimum rates of remuneration and regulating the conditions of employment of workers in relation to whom the Committee operates :

AND WHEREAS the provisions of section 43 of the act have been complied with :

NOW, THEREFORE, the Court, in exercise of the powers conferred on it by section 43 of the act hereby orders as follows :—

1. This Order may be cited as the Employment Regulation Order (Messengers (Limerick City) Joint Labour Committee) 1957.

2. Effect is hereby given to the proposals set out in the Schedule hereto.

3. The provisions set out in the Schedule hereto shall have effect as from the 12th day of October, 1957.

SCHEDULE

Section 1.—Workers to whom this Schedule Applies.

Workers fourteen years of age and upwards but under nineteen years of age who are engaged wholly or mainly in the collection or delivery of goods or messages outside the employer's place of business and who are employed by persons whose place of business is situate in the area of the County Borough of Limerick.

Excluding :

(a) Workers who are engaged as drivers of mechanically propelled or animal-drawn vehicles ;

(b) Workers to whom an Employment Regulation Order giving effect to proposals submitted by another Joint Labour Committee for the time being applies ;

(c) Workers to whom a Registered Employment Agreement for the time being applies.

Section 2.—Minimum Wages.

(a) Workers other than Daily Workers.

A worker other than a daily worker shall be paid a weekly wage not less than the amount shown in the following table as appropriate to his age :—

Age of Worker

Minimum Weekly Wage

14 years but under 15 years

31/-

15 " " "  16"

34/6

16 " " "  17"

39/-

17 " " "  18"

44/6

18 " " "  19"

51/1

(b) Daily Workers

(1) A daily worker means a worker engaged to work on any number of days less than five in any week.

(2) A daily worker shall be paid an hourly wage not less than the amount shown in the following table as appropriate to his age.

Age of Workers

Minimum Hourly Wage

14 years but under 15 years

1/-

15 " " "  16"

1/1

16 " " "  17"

1/3

17 " " "  18"

1/5

18 " " "  19"

1/8

Section 3.—Normal Working Hours.

The normal number of hours to be worked by workers in relation to whom the Committee operates shall be as follows :

In any week

46 hours

On four days in each week

8"

On one day in each week

9"

On the short day in each week

5 "

Section 4.—Overtime Rates.

The minimum rates for overtime to apply in respect of hours worked by workers in excess of the declared normal number of hours of work shall be as follows :

(a) For the first two hours of overtime on any day in excess of the declared normal number of hours—Time and a quarter of the rate otherwise applicable.

(b) For all overtime in excess of the first two hours—Time and a half of the rate otherwise applicable.

(c) For all hours worked on Sundays and Customary Public or Statutory Holidays—Twice the rate otherwise applicable i.e. Double Time subject to a minimum of 2/-.

Section 5.—Holidays and Holiday Remuneration.

Workers in relation to whom the Committee operates and who qualify for annual leave under section 10 of the Holidays (Employees) Act 1939 shall in addition to the seven consecutive whole holidays prescribed therein be granted a further period of seven consecutive whole holidays and the payment in respect of the further period shall be calculated in the same manner as that for the statutory period provided by that Act.

Where a worker ceases to be employed by a particular employer before the end of his employment year and has not been allowed annual leave in respect of the period of that year during which he was so employed, that employer shall pay to him on the cesser of that employment, one full day's pay for each month of that period during which he worked not less than 120 hours for that employer.

Section 6.—Meal Intervals.

A worker shall not be permitted to work for a longer period than four hours without being allowed a meal interval of not less than one hour's duration.

Section 7.—Protective Clothing.

The employer shall make available to the worker outer clothing adequate to give protection against wet weather. These articles shall remain the property of the employer and it shall be the duty of the worker to take reasonable care of them.

Section 8.—Maintenance and Care of Vehicles.

(a) The employer shall ensure that the vehicle to be used by a worker is maintained in good mechanical order.

(b) The worker shall take proper care of any vehicle used by him and shall bring to the notice of the employer any defect of which he becomes aware.

Section 9.—Identification of Vehicles.

The name and address of the employer shall be displayed on bicycles and tricycles in letters and figures at least one inch in height and clearly legible.

Section 10.—Maximum Loads.

The maximum loads which may be transported by a worker shall be :

(a) Transport by bicycle or tricycle 60 lb. if the worker is under 16 years of age and 80 lb. if the worker is over 16 years of age.

(b) A load transported by bicycle or tricycle shall be so loaded as not to obstruct the view of the worker or his control of the vehicle.

Section 11.—Deductions for Absences.

If a worker absents himself from work without leave for any day or portion of a day, the employer shall have the right to deduct from the worker's remuneration a sum equivalent to the pay for such time so missed on a basis pro rata to the worker's normal working week.

GIVEN under the Official Seal of the Labour Court this 8th day of October, 1957.

D. MacDIARMADA,

A person authorised under Section 18 of the Industrial Relations Act, 1946 , to authenticate the Seal of the Court.

Explanatory Note.

This Instrument fixes minimum rates of pay and conditions of employment of messengers employed in Limerick City. It is made by the Labour Court on the recommendation of the Messengers (Limerick City) Joint Labour Committee.