ADDITIONAL LEAVE PROVIDED ON TOP OF THE HOLIDAYS ACT – GET IT RIGHT IN PAYROLL
One of the catchphrases often heard about the Holidays Act is that it is “A minimum entitlement Act.” Another is, “As an employer, you can always do better than the Act.” In this regard, many employers provide better than the legislation by giving additional leave entitlements, but how they have provided them often creates ongoing problems and issues for payroll.
Some people will read this article with a focus on the downtrodden employees. ?This article discusses employers who decide to provide better than the law.? By doing better, I do not see why the employer can't make it work for the business (and payroll) and the employee; give and take goes both ways.
So, in this article, I will cover a range of leave types commonly provided to employees in addition to the minimum entitlement provided under the Holidays Act.? I will separate them, but there is a bit of a double-up on how they should be managed.? The additional leave types that will be covered are:
Additional annual holidays
It is common for employers to give employees an extra week or weeks of annual leave.? I am not talking about a purchasing leave scheme; the employer just provides additional leave as a business decision to support their employees (helping with work-life balance, retention, or even being seen as an employer of choice to attract employees to join the organisation).? This is about the culture of the business.? Of course, there is a cost involved in doing this.
So, what does it mean in payroll terms to provide additional annual holidays?
How to make this additional annual leave workable in payroll and for the business:
Other issues that can be caused when you treat the additional annual holiday the same as a minimum entitlement:
Changing 8% to include additional leave being provided
Additional sick leave
Sick leave is the most common additional leave type after annual holiday entitlement, where employers regularly offer more than the minimum provided under the Holidays Act.
Additional sick leave as an agreed term:
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Additional bereavement leave
Some employers have a policy that employees can get five days of bereavement leave for a close family member (three days as per the Act and two days by agreement).? Another version would be tangi leave (usually five days per instance). ?Ensure any additional bereavement leave is open to all employees, not just one group, or it could be seen as discrimination or disadvantageous.
Additional bereavement leave as an agreed term:
What not to do with additional bereavement leave (not payroll):
Additional family violence leave
Supporting an employee may see an employer provide additional leave in this area on a case-by-case basis.? NZPPA suggests not providing a general policy on this area other than offering that the employee contact management if they need additional support or assistance (there may be a specific person in the business they should contact).
Family violence leave as an agreed term:
Create an evaluation period for any new additional leave type being provided
In previous articles, I have mentioned the phrase “keeping up with the Joneses” to explain what payroll faces when management or HR sees something shiny and new and dumps it on payroll to implement without providing the details we need.? So, payroll invests a lot of time and resources into getting this new initiative in place, only to find that there is little interest or uptake from employees.? Payroll then ends up managing a process that basically does nothing for the business or its employees.?
So, relating that back to the point of this article, before jumping in and providing additional leave, the business needs to do some research on what employees need, how it should be provided and when, what the business hopes to get out of doing this (return on investment), and what it will cost the business the first year, the second year, and so on.
If things don’t work out, the business needs to have an exit strategy if the point of providing additional leave is not achieved.? So, any new additional leave should be framed as being provided subject to an evaluation period, which could mean the leave is withdrawn when evaluated later.? The evaluation terms can be published, and employees involved in the process, so it is not just ripped out, causing potential ill will.? The point is, why have additional leave that does nothing for the business and employees?? It helps ensure payroll stays streamlined, focusing resources on what is necessary – compliance and paying employees correctly.
In conclusion, additional leave provided to an employee is an agreed term, so make the agreed term work for the business, payroll and the employee.? The bottom line is that the employee is getting something extra, so as part of the agreement, keep it simple so it does not cause additional work or cost for the business and no more headaches for payroll.? ABOVE ALL ELSE, DO NOT LINK ADDITIONAL LEAVE TO THE HOLIDAYS ACT. One nightmare is enough, PLEASE!
NZPPA supporting NZ payroll since 2007!
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