Source: Silindokuhle Magagula and Lesego Ralekoa, Daily Maverick, 9 March 2021, photo credit: Getty Images/Prestigeonline
With the roll-out of the Covid-19 vaccine in motion, numerous employers are wanting to impose mandatory vaccination as part of their health and safety protocols. The question is whether employers may fairly dismiss their employees for refusing to take the vaccine? In this article, we deal with the legal position relevant to this question.
Is the dismissal automatically unfair?
Section 187(1)(f) of the Labour Relations Act (LRA) provides that if the reason for the dismissal is that the employer unfairly discriminated against an employee on grounds set out in the LRA, this dismissal is automatically unfair. These grounds include age, religion, conscience and belief as well as “any other arbitrary ground”. An employee who refuses to be vaccinated, for example, on religious or similar grounds, could argue that the dismissal was automatically on this basis. It will be for the employer to show that the reason for the dismissal was not one of these (or other discriminatory) grounds.
Unfair dismissals
Even if it is established that the reason for the dismissal was not an automatically unfair reason, the employer will still have to show that the dismissal was not unfair. Section 188 of the LRA provides that a dismissal is unfair if it is not effected for a fair reason falling within one of the three categories of dismissal recognised by the LRA, and in accordance with a fair procedure. These three categories of dismissal are:
- The conduct of the employee;
- The capacity of the employee; and
- The operational requirements of the employer’s business.
We deal with dismissal for each of these reasons below.
Misconduct
Item 7 of the Code of Good Practice: Dismissal (the “code”) requires any person determining whether a dismissal for misconduct is unfair to consider whether the employee contravened a rule or standard regulating conduct in, or of relevance to, the workplace.
Accordingly, employers could formulate their vaccination policy in such a manner that it creates a rule or requirement for employees to take the vaccine. However, the code provides that a disciplinary must be valid or reasonable. It is entirely possible that employees could challenge the reasonableness of this rule, for example, on the basis that it constitutes a serious infringement of various constitutional rights such as the right to privacy or bodily integrity.
But it is also possible that an employer may be able to justify the rule on the basis that vaccination is required to enable the employer to comply with its obligations (and those of its employees) in terms of the Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA) or the Mine Health and Safety Act (MHSA). The code also requires the employer to show that the disciplinary sanction of dismissal is fair.
The failure or refusal to be vaccinated could also be cast as a form of insubordination. However, an employer would have to show that the instruction to be vaccinated was reasonable and lawful and the arguments mentioned above would also be applicable in this scenario.
Although there is no law in South Africa making it mandatory for citizens to take the vaccine, employers are still required by the OHSA and the MHSA to provide and maintain, as far as is reasonably practicable, a working environment that is safe and without risk to the health of its employees. In addition, the increasing number of deaths caused by the virus and the hardship suffered by businesses satisfies the requirement of reasonableness.
The facts of each failure or refusal to take the vaccine ought to be considered as there may be valid grounds for the employee’s failure or refusal which do not justify his/her dismissal.
Incapacity
In certain (probably limited) circumstances, the termination of employment could be justified on the basis of incapacity. This could, for example, be the case where a statute or regulation is enacted that requires that an employee be vaccinated as a precondition for the employee to do the job. An example may be employees on a cargo vessel who are required to enter and exit from other countries to deliver and collect goods. These individuals may be required in terms of the laws of other jurisdictions to present proof of the vaccination on entry and exit.
In some cases, where employees are required to interact with one another and/or where interaction with the general public is necessary in order for employees to carry out their duties, risk assessments performed by the employer may make it mandatory for employees to be vaccinated for them to render their services safely. Arguably, employees who do not take the vaccine could be dismissed on the basis that they are unable to render their services safely or adequately.
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