Overview of the Draft Employment Equity Regulations published on 1 February 2024

22nd February 2024

Overview of the Draft Employment Equity Regulations published on 1 February 2024

Draft Employment Equity (‘EE’) Regulations (‘the 1 February Draft EE Regulations’) setting out revised Sector Targets, were published by the Department of Employment and Labour (‘DEL’) on 1 February 2024 in preparation for the commencement of Section 15A of the Employment Equity Amendment Act No 4 of 2022 (‘the Amendment Act’)

Section 15A of the Amendment Act provides for the introduction of Sector Targets with which Designated Employers (those > 50 employees) will have to comply in setting their EE Goals. Setor Targets are being introduced by the DEL to increase the pace of transformation, and to counter the existing practice on the part of some employers of setting low EE Goals[1].

Salient features of the 1 February Draft EE Regulations are:

I deal with the last four bullets below.

1. Setting of 5-Year Sectoral Numerical Targets

The factors that need to be take into account by designated employers when setting their Numerical Goals are, inter alia:

2. Preparing and implementing an employment equity plan, reporting and compliance analysis

Criteria relevant to the setting of Goals (and their implementation), which employers are required to take into account, are:

Criteria relevant to the implementing an employment equity plan, reporting and compliance analysis of affirmative action in any workplace are the:

3. No changes made to the EAP to be used by Designated Employers with a National footprint in setting EE Goals

With regard to the EAP, the regulations again require that designated employers conducting their business/operations nationally use the National EAP, and that those conducting their business provincially, that province’s EAP. Although the wording is confusing it appears that designated employers conducting their business/operations nationally may instead choose to use the EAP of the province with the most employees.  However, they cannot use more than one EAP in the setting of their Goals.

4. Justifiable Reasonable Grounds for not achieving targets

These may include:

5. The forbidding of certain consequences arising from the implementation of Sector Targets

These are that:

Conclusion

The DEL has not, except for one Sector, changed any of the Sectors Targets, or expanded the Sectors to include Sub-Sectors, as requested by numerous employer organisations in their well-motivated written submission in response to the Draft Regulations published on 12 May 2023.

It has, however, introduced regulations relevant to the setting of Goals and their implementation which appear to have opened the door to the setting of EE Goals that are achievable, and do not necessarily comply strictly with a Designated Employer’s Sector’s Targets, be it for both Males and Females, or its Male or Female Targets.

I am of the view that if this is indeed the case, such pragmatic approach by the DEL is likely to result in a much earlier implementation of Sector Targets than would otherwise have been the case. The opposition to the present proposed Sector Targets and call for the inclusion of Sub-Sectors with their own targets to cater for the differences in their workforce profiles and Male:Female ratios by Employer Organisations, is likely to be withdrawn in such event.

I will be dealing with the following aspects in subsequent articles on the 1 February Draft EE Regulations:

Why the change from ‘Black’ to ‘Designated Groups’ Targets in the 1 February Draft EE Regulations is ill-conceived and should be reversed.

The positive impact of the Agreement between Solidarity and the DEL on Sector Target EE Goal setting and implementation in the 1 February Draft EE Regulations.

Why the provisions in the 1 February Draft EE Regulations with regard to the usage of National or Provincial EAP is unlawful.

Written by Adv Jan Munnik, Managing Director of EES-SIYAKHA