Reinstated Employees Can Become Untouchable

3rd September 2018

Reinstated Employees Can Become Untouchable

The Labour Relations Act (LRA) requires that, where a dismissal is unfair,  reinstatement must be considered ahead of any other remedy.

Reinstatement means that the employee must be returned to the same job on the same terms and conditions as existed before. And the employer can be required to pay the employee for the entire period from dismissal to reinstatement.

Where it is ordered that the employee be ‘re-employed’ he/she is to return to work but in a different job.

There is nothing specific in law that gives the reinstated employee a higher status merely by virtue of his/her being a reinstated employee. That is, the employee’s status does not automatically increase over that of his/her colleagues or over the status existing prior to the dismissal merely because of the reinstatement order.

However, psychologically the reinstated employee may well have grown in status. This is because:

It must be stressed that the above concerns do not prevent the employer from disciplining, retrenching or otherwise dismissing a reinstated employee. However, it does mean that the employer would need to do so with the utmost care. This means that the employer must ensure that:

In order to achieve the above two most challenging tasks the employer may need to make use of far better labour law expertise than was utilised for the case in which the employee was reinstated. The alternative to following the this advice would be:

To book for our 14 September JHB seminar on HOW TO WIN AT THE CCMA please contact Ronni via ronni@labourlawadvice.co.za or 0845217492.

Written by Ivan Israelstam, Chief Executive of Labour Law Management Consulting. He may be contacted on (011) 888-7944 or 0828522973 or on e-mail address: ivan@labourlawadvice.co.za.