Small Business Guide to Easter Public Holidays
Navigating your business through the busy Easter Holidays Season is stressful enough for small business owners. On top of that you need to plan ahead for public holidays and staff wages. This year we have an extended Easter Public Holiday season as Anzac Day falls a few days after Easter.
The area that we uncover the majority of errors in our Wage Audits is Public Holidays
Who gets paid what and when - this is the question we are most often asked
Public Holidays - We have you covered..
Easter Public Holidays are:
Good Friday - April 19, 2019
Easter Saturday - April 20, 2019
Easter Sunday - April 21, 2019
Easter Monday - April 22, 2019
Anzac Day - April 25, 2019
The following information has been provided by Fair Work Australia
Overview
Public holidays form part of the National Employment Standards (NES). The NES apply to all employees covered by the national workplace relations system, regardless of any award, agreement or contract.
The NES provide an entitlement for employees to be absent from work on a day or part-day that is a public holiday.
The NES protect an employee’s workplace right to reasonably refuse to work on a public holiday, and will guarantee payment where an employee is absent from work because of a public holiday.
Employees are protected from adverse action for having, using, or seeking to use their workplace right to reasonably refuse to work on a public holiday.
What days are public holidays?
The following days are public holidays under the NES:
1 January (New Year’s Day)
26 January (Australia Day)
Good Friday
Easter Saturday
Easter Sunday
Easter Monday
25 April (Anzac Day)
Queen’s birthday holiday (the day on which it is celebrated in a State or Territory or a region of a State or Territory)
25 December (Christmas Day)
26 December (Boxing Day)
any other day or part-day declared or prescribed by or under a law of a State or Territory to be observed generally within the State or Territory (or a region of the State or Territory) as a public holiday.
Can a public holiday be substituted for another day?
If, under the law of a State or Territory, a day or part-day is substituted for any of the above days or part-days, then the substituted day or part-day is the public holiday.
An award or agreement may include provisions for an employer and employee to agree to substitute the above days or part-days for another day or part-day. Furthermore, an employer and an award/agreement-free employee may agree to substitute the above days or part days for another day or part-day.
An employer must not exert undue influence or pressure on an employee in relation to agreeing to substitute a public holiday for another day or part-day.
What are reasonable grounds for requesting or refusing to work on a public holiday?
In determining whether a request (or a refusal of such a request) to work on a public holiday is reasonable, the following must be taken into account:
the nature of the employer’s workplace (including its operational requirements) and the nature of the work performed by the employee
the employee’s personal circumstances, including family responsibilities
whether the employee could reasonably expect that the employer might request work on the public holiday
whether the employee is entitled to receive overtime payments, penalty rates, additional remuneration or other compensation that reflects an expectation of work on the public holiday
the type of employment (e.g. full-time, part-time, casual or shiftwork)
the amount of notice in advance of the public holiday given by the employer when making the request
the amount of notice in advance of the public holiday given by the employee in refusing the request
any other relevant matter.
What payment is required for an absence from work due to a public holiday?
If an employee is absent from work on a day or part day that is a public holiday, the employer must pay the employee (other than a casual employee) the base rate of pay for the employee’s ordinary hours of work on that day or part-day. The base rate of pay to be paid excludes incentive-based payments and bonuses, loadings, monetary allowances, overtime or penalty rates, or any other separately identifiable amounts.
However, an employee is not entitled to payment if they do not have ordinary hours of work on the public holiday.
For example, a part-time employee is not entitled to payment if their part-time hours do not include the day of the week on which the public holiday falls.
Example
Stephanie is a full-time employee who usually works overtime in addition to her ordinary hours of work on Friday’s. She receives penalty rates for these overtime hours under the applicable modern award. Stephanie is absent on the public holiday on Friday 26 January 2018, and is entitled to her base rate of pay for her ordinary hours. She is not entitled to payment for the overtime hours she would have usually worked had it not been a public holiday.
Stephanie’s colleague John is a part-time employee who is rostered to work Monday to Wednesday each week. As John’s ordinary hours of work do not include Friday’s , he is not entitled to payment for the public holiday on 26 January 2018.