News Links
- Home
- News
- Business
- Editorial
- Draft Constitution
- Columnists
- Commentaries
- Cartoon
- Madd Madd World
- Pictures
- Special Reports
- Politics
- Parliament
- World News
- OdD nEwS
- Blogs
- Magazines
- Real Estate
- Agriculture
- Environment
- Travel
- Art & Literature
- Fashion
- Relationships
- Children
- Education
- Letters
- Point Blank
- Careers
- Celebrating Life
- Feedback
Poll
Your Say
Those bound by CBAs must pay agency fees
Related Stories
Those bound by CBAs must pay agency fees
Atwoli: Push for reforms won’t stop
Trade unionists must fill political vacuum
Cotu gives State ultimatum on new constitution
State says census tally will meet target
KQ, union fail to agree as strike enters day two
Claris Ogangah
QUESTION: My employer has deducted dues even from some of us who have not been active union members for the past 15 years. Is it right for the management to effect the deductions in arrears? If so, is it in order for the union to compel the same management to effect the deductions without notifying the affected employees?
A previous article on this issue indicated that joining a trade union was a voluntary action. Section 6 of the Labour Relations Act provides for freedom of association, where employees have a right to join and participate in the activities of a trade union.
We further stated that as a requirement, every member of a trade union must pay subscription, also known as trade union dues, which is the amount of money paid as a condition for retaining membership.
However, employees who are not members of trade unions, but who are subject to a collective bargaining agreement by virtue of working for a company that has such an agreement with a trade union have to pay agency fees.
This is provided for in Section 49(1) of the Labour Relations Act.
It states: "A trade union that has concluded a collective agreement registered by the Industrial Court with an employer, group of employers or an employers’ organisation, setting terms and conditions of service for all unionisable employees covered by the agreement may request the minister to issue an order requiring any employer bound by the collective agreement to deduct an agency fee from the wages of each unionisable employee covered by the collective agreement who is not a member of the trade union."
Authorise deductions
An official request (signed by the employer and the trade union) is made to the minister, in this case the Minister for Labour, to authorise the deductions of this amount from the employees’ salaries.
The authorisation is not automatically given and the minister has to satisfy himself that it is necessary to make the order for deductions.
Section 49(3) provides that members of trade unions who have since resigned from the trade unions must pay this agency fees, so you and your colleagues are not exempted from these deductions.
The second part of your question, however, raises fundamental issues as to whether agency fees can be collected in arrears. Section 49(6) of the Labour Relations Act states: "If a collective agreement is implemented retrospectively after registration by the Industrial Court, the agency fee shall be deducted and paid to the trade union for the period of retrospective implementation in accordance with this section.
The labour laws came into place in 2007 and that could be the reason the payments have been backdated to the said year. In view of the above sections, your employer has a right to deduct arrears. But it is important to find out whether these deductions as well as the arrears were authorised by the minister.
Read all about: trade union Labour Relations Act
Business
Kenya ranks top in EU grant list—envoy
The European Commission (EC) has given Sh1 billion in grants to local private sector.
The money will support 15 Non-State ...more
Sports News
ET: for SA
After two years of trudging the road to the Fifa World Cup finals in South Africa, the mosaic of 32 finalists is complete.
...more
Today's magazine
Woman's Instinct
Forensic dentist and beauty queen She struts the runway like she was born to do it and makes heads turn with her enchanting features, long mane and the fact that she is usually the only Asian on most catwalks in Nairobi. But 29-year-old Amrit Khalsi has another life: She traded the haute couture designer outfits for a lab coat and the runway for the Kenyatta National Hospital morgue.
Adverts



