Source: http://revisedacts.lawreform.ie/eli/2001/act/19/revised/en/html
Timestamp: 2017-11-18 10:05:12
Document Index: 14100270

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 2', 'art 1', 'arts 2', 'art 4', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 3', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4']

Number 19 of 2001
This Revised Act is an administrative consolidation of the Carer’s Leave Act 2001. It is prepared by the Law Reform Commission in accordance with its function under the Law Reform Commission Act 1975 (3/1975) to keep the law under review and to undertake revision and consolidation of statute law.
All Acts up to and including Urban Regeneration and Housing Act 2015 (33/2015), enacted 28 July 2015, and all statutory instruments up to and including Workplace Relations Act 2015 (Commencement) (No. 2) Order 2015 (S.I. No. 410 of 2015), made 30 September 2015, were considered in the preparation of this Revised Act.
All statutory instruments up to and including Workplace Relations Act 2015 (Commencement) (No. 2) Order 2015 (S.I. No. 410 of 2015), made 30 September 2015, were considered in the preparation of this revision.
Supplemental provisions to section 6 .
Manner in which carer’s leave may be taken.
Notice of carer’s leave.
Confirmation of carer’s leave.
Termination of carer’s leave.
Postponement, curtailment and variation of carer’s leave by parties concerned.
Reference by employer to Minister for Social, Community and Family Affairs on certain issues.
Amendment of Act of 1977.
Amendment of Organisation of Working Time Act, 1997.
Amendment of National Minimum Wage Act, 2000.
AN ACT TO PROVIDE FOR THE TEMPORARY ABSENCE FROM EMPLOYMENT OF EMPLOYEES FOR THE PURPOSE OF THE PROVISION OF FULL-TIME CARE AND ATTENTION TO A PERSON REQUIRING IT, TO PROTECT THE EMPLOYMENT RIGHTS OF THOSE EMPLOYEES DURING SUCH ABSENCE, AND FOR THAT PURPOSE TO AMEND CERTAIN ENACTMENTS AND TO PROVIDE FOR RELATED MATTERS. [2 nd July, 2001]
Certain functions under Act transferred (1.01.2005) by Health Act 2004 (42/2004), ss. 58, 59(1)-(3) and sch. 3 item 57, S.I. No. 887 of 2004 and S.I. No. 885 of 2004 (establishment day).
57. Carer’s Leave Act 2001
Act applied with modifications (20.12.2001) by Protection of Employees (Part-Time Work) Act 2001 (45/2001), ss. 3(1), 8, S.I. No. 636 of 2001.
3.—(1) In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires— ...
(a) the Carer’s Leave Act, 2001,
Act included in definitions of “employment enactment” and “relevant enactment” (1.08.2015) by Workplace Relations Act 2015 (16/2015), s. 2 and sch. 1 part 2 item 1, S.I. No. 338 of 2015, with the following effects:
1.—This Act may be cited as the Carer’s Leave Act, 2001.
“Act of 1967” means the Redundancy Payments Act, 1967;
“Act of 1977” means the Unfair Dismissals Act, 1977;
“Act of 2000” means the Social Welfare Act, 2000;
“appeals officer” has the meaning assigned to it by the Act of 1993;
“associated employer” shall be construed in accordance with subsection (2) ;
“carer’s leave” shall be construed in accordance with section 6 ;
“confirmation document” has the meaning assigned to it by section 10 ;
“continuous employment” shall be construed in accordance with section 7(6) ;
( a) a contract of service or apprenticeship, and
( b) any other contract whereby an individual agrees with another person, who is carrying on the business of an employment agency, within the meaning of the Employment Agency Act, 1971 , and is acting in the course of that business, to do or perform personally any work or service for a third person (whether or not that third person is a party to the contract),
“deciding officer” has the meaning assigned to it by the Act of 1993;
“dispute” shall be construed in accordance with section 17 ;
“employee” means a person of any age, who has entered into or works under (or, where the employment has ceased, entered into or worked under) a contract of employment and references, in relation to an employer, to an employee shall be construed as references to an employee employed by that employer; and for the purposes of this Act, a person holding office under, or in the service of, the State (including a civil servant within the meaning of the Civil Service Regulation Act, 1956 ) shall be deemed to be an employee employed by the State or Government, as the case may be, and an officer or servant of a local authority for the purposes of the F1 [ Local Government Act 2001 (as amended by the Local Government Reform Act 2014) ], or of a harbour authority F2 [ or health board, or a member of staff of an education and training board ] shall be deemed to be an employee employed by the authority F2 [ or board ], as the case may be;
“employer” means, in relation to an employee—
( a) the person with whom the employee has entered into or for whom the employee works under (or, where the employment has ceased, entered into or worked under) a contract of employment, subject to the qualification that the person who under a contract of employment referred to in paragraph (b) of the definition of “contract of employment” is liable to pay the wages of the individual concerned in respect of the work or service concerned shall be deemed to be the individual’s employer, and
( b) includes, where appropriate, the successor of the employer or an associated employer of the employer;
“full-time care and attention” shall be construed in accordance with section 82A (inserted by the Act of 2000) of Chapter 11A of Part II of the Act of 1993;
F3 [ ‘ Minister ’ means the Minister for Justice and Equality; ]
“relevant person” has the meaning assigned to it by section 82A(1) (inserted by the Act of 2000) of Chapter 11A of Part II of the Act of 1993;
“successor” has the meaning assigned to it by section 14(1)(a) ;
“Tribunal” means the Employment Appeals Tribunal.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, 2 employers shall be taken to be associated if one is a body corporate of which the other (whether directly or indirectly) has control or if both are bodies corporate of which a third person (whether directly or indirectly) has control and “associated employer” shall be construed accordingly.
( a) a reference to a Part or section is a reference to a Part or section of this Act, unless it is indicated that a reference to some other enactment is intended,
( b) a reference to a subsection or paragraph is a reference to the subsection or paragraph of the provision in which the reference occurs, unless it is indicated that a reference to some other provision is intended, and
( c) a reference to any enactment shall, unless the context otherwise requires, be construed as a reference to that enactment as amended or adapted by or under any subsequent enactment.
Substituted (1.07.2013) by Education and Training Boards Act 2013 (11/2013), s. 72 and sch. 6 item 35, S.I. No. 211 of 2013.
Substituted (1.10.2015) by Workplace Relations Act 2015 (16/2015), s. 52(1) and sch. 7 part 1 ref. 14, S.I. No. 410 of 2015, subject to transitional provisions in subs. (3).
( a) by regulations, provide for any matter referred to in this Act as prescribed or to be prescribed, and
( b) make regulations generally for the purpose of giving effect to this Act.
(2) Before making regulations under this Act, the Minister shall consult with the Minister for Social, Community and Family Affairs, any other Minister of the Government with whom, in his or her opinion, it is appropriate to consult and persons whom the Minister considers to be representative of employers and employees having regard to the regulations so made.
(3) Regulations under this Act may contain such consequential, supplementary and ancillary provisions as the Minister considers necessary or expedient.
(4) Every regulation under this Act shall be laid before each House of the Oireachtas as soon as may be after it is made and, if a resolution annulling the regulation is passed by either such House within the next 21 days on which the House has sat after the regulation is laid before it, the regulation shall be annulled accordingly, but without prejudice to the validity of anything previously done thereunder.
(3) Nothing in this Act shall be construed as prohibiting the inclusion in an agreement of a provision more favourable to an employee than any provision in Parts 2 to 5.
5.—Any expenses incurred by the Minister in the administration of this Act, shall, to such extent as may be sanctioned by the Minister for Finance, be paid out of monies provided by the Oireachtas.
Substituted (24.03.2006) by Social Welfare Law Reform and Pensions Act 2006 (5/2006), s. 48 and sch. 9, commenced on enactment.
7.—(1) An employee shall, as soon as is practicable, notify his or her employer of any change in circumstances which affect the entitlement to carer’s leave.
(2) Notwithstanding sections 6(4), 8(4) and 9(1) and subject to subsections (4) and (5), an employee may, while on carer’s leave in respect of a relevant person, apply for carer’s leave for another person if that person resides with the relevant person.
(3) An employee who wishes to apply for carer’s leave for another person in the circumstances referred to in subsection (2) shall apply for carer’s leave under section 6 .
(4) Where an application referred to in subsection (3) is made and an employee who is on carer’s leave in respect of a relevant person takes carer’s leave in respect of a second relevant person—
( a) the period of carer’s leave for the first-mentioned relevant person shall not exceed F5 [ 104 weeks ] from its commencement, and
( b) the period of carer’s leave for the second-mentioned relevant person shall commence on the date of the decision under section 6(5) or section 6(6) and shall not exceed F5 [ 104 weeks ] from its commencement,
and the total amount of weeks for such carer’s leave shall not exceed F5 [ 208 weeks ].
(5) An employee who is on carer’s leave in respect of a relevant person and who takes carer’s leave in respect of a second relevant person shall not make another application for carer’s leave in the circumstances referred to in subsection (2).
(6) The First Schedule to the Minimum Notice and Terms of Employment Act, 1973 , shall apply for the purpose of ascertaining the period of service of an employee and whether that service has been continuous.
(7) Regulations made under section 82B(3) (inserted by the Act of 2000) of Chapter 11A of Part II of the Act of 1993 shall apply to this Act with any necessary modifications.
8.—(1) The period of carer’s leave from employment to which an employee is entitled shall not exceed F6 [ 104 weeks ] for each relevant person and may, subject to subsections (2) and ( 3) and any regulations made under subsection (6), be taken in the form of—
( a) one continuous period of F6 [ 104 weeks ] for each relevant person, or
( b) a number of periods, the aggregate duration of which does not exceed a total of F6 [ 104 weeks ] from the date of the commencement of the carer’s leave.
(2) An employer may refuse, on reasonable grounds, to permit an employee to take a period of carer’s leave which is less than 13 weeks duration and where the employer so refuses he or she shall specify in writing to the employee the grounds for such refusal.
(3) An employee who has taken a period of carer’s leave in accordance with subsection (1)(b) in respect of a relevant person, shall not be entitled to commence a further period of carer’s leave in respect of the same relevant person, until a period of 6 weeks has elapsed since the termination of the previous period of carer’s leave.
(4) Where an employee has taken carer’s leave in respect of a relevant person and that period of carer’s leave has terminated the employee shall not commence carer’s leave in respect of another relevant person until a period of 6 months has elapsed since the termination of the previous period of carer’s leave.
(5) Nothing in this Act shall be construed as prohibiting an agreement between an employer and employee in respect of carer’s leave on terms which are more favourable to the employee than the entitlements of the employee under this Act.
(6) The Minister may make regulations in respect of the form in which carer’s leave may be taken by any specified class or classes of employees in circumstances where carer’s leave is to be taken in the form referred to in subsection (1)(b).
9.—(1) When an employee proposes to take carer’s leave, the employee shall, not later than 6 weeks before the proposed commencement of the carer’s leave, provide the employer with a notice in writing stating—
( a) the proposal to take the carer’s leave,
( b) that an application referred to in section 6(5) or, where appropriate, section 6(6) , has been made, and
( c) the proposed date of commencement of the carer’s leave and the form in which it is proposed to be taken.
(2) Where, in exceptional or emergency circumstances, it is not reasonably practicable to give notice in accordance with the period specified in subsection (1) the employee shall give that notice as soon as is reasonably practicable.
(3) An employee may revoke a notice of the proposal to take carer’s leave given to the employer in accordance with subsection (1) or, where appropriate, subsection (2), by notice in writing given to the employer before the date of the confirmation document and where the notice of the proposal to take carer’s leave is so revoked the employee shall not be entitled to take carer’s leave at the time specified in the notice given in accordance with subsection (1) or, where appropriate, subsection (2).
(4) Notwithstanding subsection (1) where leave, purporting to be carer’s leave, is taken by an employee who is entitled to carer’s leave but who has not complied with subsection (1) or (2), the employer may, at his or her discretion and subject to subsection (8), treat that leave as carer’s leave and this Act shall apply to that leave accordingly.
(5) An employer shall retain the documents given to him or her in accordance with subsection (1).
(6) An employee who is on carer’s leave shall, not less than 4 weeks before the date on which that employee is due to return to his or her employment, give notice in writing to the employer of the intention to return to work.
(7) Subsection (6) shall not apply if the period of carer’s leave is terminated in accordance with section 11(2) .
(8) An employer may, when exercising his or her discretion under subsection (4), refuse to treat leave as carer’s leave on reasonable grounds and where the employer so refuses he or she shall specify in writing the grounds for such refusal.
10.—(1) Where an employee has given his or her employer the decision referred to in section 6(1)(b) , the employee and the employer shall, on a date that is not less than 2 weeks before the proposed commencement of the carer’s leave concerned, prepare and sign a document (referred to in this Act as a “confirmation document”) specifying the date of the commencement of the carer’s leave, its duration and the form in which it will be taken.
(2) Subsection (1) shall apply to the taking of carer’s leave in accordance with section 9(4) and the employee and the employer shall prepare and sign the confirmation document as soon as may be.
(4) A confirmation document, including any amendments to it made under section 12(1) , shall be a notice for the purposes of section 31 .
11.—(1) The period of carer’s leave shall terminate—
( a) on the date of termination of the period of carer’s leave specified in the confirmation document,
( b) on a date agreed between the employee and employer concerned,
( c) where the person in respect of whom the employee has taken carer’s leave ceases to satisfy the conditions for a relevant person for the purposes of the Act,
( d) where the employee ceases to satisfy the conditions for the provision of full-time care and attention for the purposes of the Act,
( e) where a decision under subsection (2) is made, on the date specified in subsection (3), and
( f) where the relevant person dies during a period of carer’s leave on the date earliest of the following dates—
(i) the date that is 6 weeks after the date of death, or
(ii) the date of termination of the period specified in the confirmation document.
(2) Where a deciding officer or an appeals officer makes a decision under section 18(4) or section 18(5) that—
( a) the person in respect of whom an employee proposed to take or has taken carer’s leave did not or does not satisfy or no longer satisfies the requirements for a relevant person,
( b) the employee does not satisfy the conditions for providing full-time care and attention, or
( c) the employee is engaging or has engaged in employment or self-employment other than as prescribed under section 82B(3) (inserted by the Act of 2000) of Chapter 11A of Part II of the Act of 1993,
the period of carer’s leave shall terminate and the deciding officer or the appeals officer shall, as soon as practicable, notify the employer and the employee of that decision.
(3) The employer, following a notification referred to in subsection (2) , shall, as soon as practicable, give the employee a notice in writing specifying the date on which the employee is to return to his or her employment and that date shall be a date that is reasonable and practicable having regard to all the circumstances.
(4) Where carer’s leave is terminated under subsection (2), the employee concerned shall return to his or her employment on the day specified in the notice under subsection (3) and any period between the date of the return to the employment and the date of the end of the period of the carer’s leave that is specified in the confirmation document concerned, shall be deemed not to be carer’s leave.
(5) An employer shall, when the employee returns to his or her employment, give a notice in writing to the Minister for Social, Community and Family Affairs that the period of carer’s leave has terminated, the employee has returned to work and the date of the return to employment.
(6) A person shall retain a notice under this section given to him or her and a copy of a notice under this section given by him or her.
(7) Notwithstanding section 24 , the giving of a notice to an employee under this section shall be effected by delivering it to the employee or by sending a copy of it by prepaid registered letter in an envelope addressed to the employee at the last known residence of the employee or, where appropriate, the residence of the relevant person.
12.—(1) If, after the date of the confirmation document (whether or not the period of carer’s leave to which it relates has commenced) the employer and the employee so agree—
( a) the carer’s leave or part of it may be postponed to such time as may be so agreed between the parties,
( b) the period of carer’s leave may be curtailed in a manner and to an extent as may be so agreed between the parties, or
( c) the form of the carer’s leave may be varied in a manner as may be so agreed between the parties,
and the confirmation document shall be amended in accordance with such agreement.
(2) Where carer’s leave is postponed, curtailed or varied the period of carer’s leave that is not taken by reason of such postponement, curtailment or variation may, subject to section 6 , be taken at another time.
13.—(1) An employee who is absent from work on carer’s leave shall be regarded as still working in the employment for all purposes relating to his or her employment and none of his or her rights or obligations related to the employment shall be affected by availing of carer’s leave other than—
( a) the right to—
(ii) annual leave, except as provided for in subsection (2),
(iii) public holidays, except as provided for in subsection (3) , and
(iv) superannuation benefits,
( b) any obligation to pay contributions in, or in respect of, the employment.
(2) Section 19 of the Organisation of Working Time Act, 1997, shall apply to the first 13 weeks of absence from work on carer’s leave for each relevant person.
(3) Section 21(1) of the Organisation of Working Time Act, 1997, shall apply to the first 13 weeks of absence from work on carer’s leave for each relevant person and shall not apply to public holidays that occur after such period of absence from work.
(4) Absence from employment while on carer’s leave shall not be treated as part of any other leave from the employment (including sick leave, annual leave, adoptive leave, maternity leave, parental leave and force majeure leave) to which the employee concerned is entitled.
( a) an employee who is on probation in his or her employment or is undergoing training in relation to that employment or is employed under a contract of apprenticeship takes carer’s leave, and
( b) his or her employer considers that the employee’s absence from employment while on carer’s leave would not be consistent with the continuance of the probation, training or apprenticeship,
the employer may require that the probation, training or apprenticeship be suspended during the period of the carer’s leave and be completed by the employee at the end of that period.
14.—(1) On the termination of carer’s leave in accordance with this Act, the employee concerned shall be entitled to return to work—
( a) with the employer with whom he or she was working immediately before the start of the period or, where during the employee’s absence from work there was or were a change or changes of ownership of the undertaking in which the employee was employed immediately before the absence, the owner on the expiration of the period (“the successor”),
( c) under the contract of employment in respect of which the employee was employed immediately before the commencement of the period or, where a change of ownership such as is referred to in paragraph (a) has occurred, under a contract of employment with the successor, that is identical to the contract under which the employee was employed immediately before such commencement, and (in either case) under terms or conditions not less favourable to the employee than those that would have been applicable to him or her if he or she had not been so absent from work.
( a) it is of a kind that is suitable in relation to the employee concerned and appropriate for the employee to do in the circumstances.
( b) the terms or conditions of the contract relating to the place where the work under it is required to be done, the capacity in which the employee concerned is to be employed and any other terms or conditions of employment are not substantially less favourable to the employee than those of his or her contract of employment immediately before the commencement of the period of absence from work while on carer’s leave, and
( c) the continuity of service is preserved.
16.—(1) An employer shall not penalise an employee for proposing to exercise or having exercised his or her entitlement to carer’s leave.
(2) Penalisation of an employee includes—
( a) dismissal of the employee.
( b) unfair treatment of the employee, including selection for redundancy, and
( c) an unfavourable change in the conditions of employment of the employee.
(3) If a penalisation of an employee, in contravention of subsection (1) , constitutes a dismissal of the employee, as referred to in subsection (2)(a) the employee may institute proceedings under the Unfair Dismissals Acts, 1977 to 1993, in respect of that dismissal and such dismissal may not be referred to a rights commissioner under Part 4.
(4) An employee who is entitled to return to work in the employment concerned in accordance with section 14 but is not permitted by his or her employer to do so—
( a) shall be deemed to have been dismissed on the date on which he or she was entitled to so return to work and the dismissal shall be deemed, for the purposes of the Unfair Dismissals Acts, 1977 to 1993, to have been an unfair dismissal unless, having regard to all the circumstances, there were substantial grounds justifying the dismissal, and
( b) shall be deemed for the purposes of the Redundancy Payments Acts, 1967 to 1991, to have had his or her contract of employment with his or her employer terminated on the date aforesaid.
Deleted (1.10.2015) by Workplace Relations Act 2015 (16/2015), s. 52(1) and sch. 7 part 1 ref. 14, S.I. No. 410 of 2015, subject to transitional provision in subs. (2).
Substituted (1.10.2015) by Workplace Relations Act 2015 (16/2015), s. 52(1) and sch. 7 part 1 ref. 14, S.I. No. 410 of 2015, subject to transitional provision in subs. (2).
Redress and appeal procedures for dispute about entitlements under Act (other than a dispute to which s. 17(1)(a), (b) or (c) applies) provided (1.10.2015) by Workplace Relations Act 2015 (16/2015), ss. 41, 44, sch. 5 part 3 item 5 and sch. 6 part 1 item 14, S.I. No. 410 of 2015.
17.—(1) This Part F7 [ … ] does not apply to a dispute relating to—
( a) any matter arising out of section 6(5) and 6(6),
( b) any matter arising out of paragraphs (a), (c) and (d) of section 6(1) , and
( c) any matter arising out of section 18 .
(2) Where, in a dispute, there is a decision of a deciding officer or an appeals officer that concerns a matter specified in paragraph (a), (b) or (c) of subsection (1), F8 [ an adjudication officer within the meaning of the Workplace Relations Act 2015 or the Labour Court, as may be appropriate, ] shall accept that decision as a final determination of that matter.
(3) A document purporting to be a decision of a deciding officer or an appeals officer and signed by that officer shall be sufficient evidence of the making of the decision and of its terms, without proof of the signature of that officer or of the official capacity of that officer.
(4) This Part does not apply to a member of the Defence Forces.
Six month time limit for referral of disputes imposed (1.10.2015) by Workplace Relations Act 2015 (16/2015), s. 41(7)(b), S.I. No. 410 of 2015, subject to exception in subs. (8).
18.—(1) An employer who is of the opinion that—
( a) the person in respect of whom the employee proposes to take carer’s leave is not or is no longer a relevant person, or
( b) the person in respect of whom carer’s leave has been granted, and in respect of whom the employee is on carer’s leave, is not or is no longer a relevant person,
shall notify the Minister for Social, Community and Family Affairs of his or her opinion and the grounds for that opinion.
(2) An employer who is of the opinion that an employee who proposes to take, or is on, carer’s leave does not satisfy the conditions for providing full-time care and attention to the relevant person shall notify the Minister for Social, Community and Family Affairs of his or her opinion and the grounds for such opinion.
(3) An employer who is of the opinion that an employee who proposes to take, or is on, carer’s leave is engaging or has engaged in employment or self-employment other than as prescribed under section 82B(3) (inserted by the Act of 2000) of Chapter 11A of Part II of the Act of 1993 shall notify the Minister for Social, Community and Family Affairs of his or her opinion and the grounds for such opinion.
(4) On receipt of a notification under subsection (1), (2) or (3), the notification shall be referred to a deciding officer for a decision under the Act of 1993 as to whether—
( a) the person referred to in subsection (1) is a relevant person,
( b) the employee satisfies the conditions for providing full-time care and attention to the relevant person, or
( c) the employee is engaging or has engaged in employment or self-employment other than as prescribed under section 82B(3) (inserted by the Act of 2000) of Chapter 11A of Part II of the Act of 1993.
for the purposes of Chapter 11A (inserted by the Act of 2000) of Part II of the Act of 1993.
(5) A decision of a deciding officer under subsection (4) may be appealed under section 257 of the Act of 1993.
19. F9 [ … ]
Repealed (1.10.2015) by Workplace Relations Act 2015 (16/2015), s. 8(1) and sch. 2 part 1 ref. 13, S.I. No. 410 of 2015.
20. F10 [ … ]
Substituted (1.10.2015) by Workplace Relations Act 2015 (16/2015), s. 52(1) and sch. 7 part 1 ref. 14, S.I. No. 410 of 2015, subject to transitional provision in subs. (3).
22. F12 [ … ]
Repealed (1.10.2015) by Workplace Relations Act 2015 (16/2015), s. 8(1) and sch. 2 part 1 ref. 13, S.I. No. 410 of 2015, subject to transitional provision in subs. (2).
23. F13 [ … ]
24.—(1) A notice or other document under Part 4 shall be, subject to subsection (2), addressed to the person concerned by name, and may be served on or given to the person in one of the following ways—
( b) by leaving it at the address at which the person ordinarily resides or, in a case in which an address for service has been furnished, at that address.
( c) by sending it by post in a prepaid registered letter to the address at which the person ordinarily resides, or in a case in which an address for service has been furnished, to that address.
(2) For the purposes of this section, a company, within the meaning of the Companies Acts, 1963 to 1999, shall be deemed to be ordinarily resident at its registered office, and every other body corporate and every unincorporated body shall be deemed to be ordinarily resident at its principal office or place of business.
25. F14 [ … ]
26.—The Act of 1967 is amended in Schedule 3 by the substitution in paragraph 5(1) for clause ( d) (inserted by the Parental Leave Act, 1998 ) of the following clause:
“( d) a period during which the employee is absent from work while on protective leave, natal care absence within the meaning of Part IV of the Maternity Protection Act, 1994 , parental leave, force majeure leave or carer’s leave under the Carer’s Leave Act, 2001.”.
27.—(1) Section 2(2) of the Act of 1977 is amended by the insertion in paragraph ( d) (inserted by the Adoptive Leave Act, 1995) after “the adopting parent” of:
( e) dismissal where the employer at the commencement of the employment informs the employee in writing that the employment will terminate on the return to work with that employer of an employee who is absent from work while on carer’s leave under the Carer’s Leave Act, 2001, and the dismissal of the employee duly occurs for the purpose of facilitating the return to work of the employee who has been on carer’s leave.”.
(2) Section 6 of the Act of 1977 is amended—
( a) by the substitution in subsection (2) for paragraph ( dd) (inserted by the Parental Leave Act, 1998) of the following paragraph:
“( dd) the exercise or proposed exercise by the employee of the right to parental leave, force majeure leave under and in accordance with the Parental Leave Act, 1998 , or carer’s leave under and in accordance with the Carer’s Leave Act, 2001,”,
( b) by the insertion, after subsection (2B) (inserted by the Parental Leave Act, 1998 ), of the following subsection:
“(2C) Sections 3 and 4 do not apply to a case falling within subsection (2)( dd) and, for the purpose of that paragraph, ‘employee’ includes a person who would otherwise be excluded from this Act by paragraph ( a), ( b), ( c), ( d), ( e), ( f), ( g), ( h), ( i) or ( j) of section 2(1).”.
28.—The Organisation of Working Time Act, 1997, is amended—
( a) in section 15, by the substitution in subsection (4), for paragraph ( aa) (inserted by the Parental Leave Act, 1998) of the following paragraph:
“( aa) any period during which the employee was absent from work while on parental leave, force majeure leave or carer’s leave within the meaning of the Carer’s Leave Act, 2001,”,
( b) in section 16, by the substitution in subsection (5), for paragraph ( cc) (inserted by the Parental Leave Act, 1998) of the following paragraph:
“( cc) any period during which the employee was absent from work while on parental leave, force majeure leave or carer’s leave within the meaning of the Carer’s Leave Act, 2001.”.
29.—The National Minimum Wage Act, 2000, is amended in section 8(2) by the substitution for subparagraph (ii) of the following subparagraph:
“(ii) time spent absent from work on annual leave, sick leave, protective leave, adoptive leave, parental leave, carer’s leave under the Carer’s Leave Act, 2001 , while laid-off, on strike or on ‘lock-out’, or time for which the employee is paid in lieu of notice, or”.
30.— Section 6 of the Protection of Employees (Employers’ Insolvency) Act, 1984 , is amended—
( a) in subsection (2)( a)(v) (as amended by the Parental Leave Act, 1998 ) by the substitution for clause (II) of the following clause:
“(II) a decision, determination or order under Part V of the Maternity Protection Act, 1994, Part IV of the Parental Leave Act, 1998, or Part 4 of the Carer’s Leave Act, 2001 ,”,
( b) in subsection (4)( c) by—
(i) the substitution for subparagraph (iv) (other than clauses (I) and (II) (as amended by the Parental Leave Act, 1998 ) of the following subparagraph:
“(iv) a payment shall not be made under this section in respect of an amount to which a decision under Part V of the Maternity Protection Act, 1994 , Part IV of the Parental Leave Act, 1998, or Part 4 of the Carer’s Leave Act, 2001, relates unless—”,
(ii) the substitution for subparagraph (v) (other than clauses (I) and (II) (as amended by the Parental Leave Act, 1998 ) of the following subparagraph:
“(v) a payment shall not be made under this section in respect of an amount to which a determination under Part V of the Maternity Protection Act, 1994 , Part IV of the Parental Leave Act, 1998 , or Part 4 of the Carer’s Leave Act, 2001, relates unless—”.
31.—(1) An employer shall make a record of the carer’s leave taken by his or her employees indicating the period of employment for each employee and the dates and times in respect of which each employee was on carer’s leave.
(2) A record made under this section shall be retained by the employer concerned for a period of 8 years and, if the Minister prescribes the form of such records, the records shall be kept in the prescribed form.
(3) Notices, or copies of notices, required to be retained under this Act by a person shall be retained by that person for a period of 3 years.
(4) An employer who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding €3,000 (£2,362.69).
32. F15 [ … ]
33.—(1) A person guilty of an offence under this Act shall be liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding €3,000 (£2,362.69).
(2) Where an offence under this Act is committed by a body corporate and is proved to have been committed with the consent or connivance of, or to be attributable to any neglect on the part of, a person being a director, manager, secretory or other officer of that body corporate, or a person who was purporting to act in that capacity, that person shall also be guilty of an offence and be liable to be proceeded against and punished as if he or she were guilty of the first-mentioned offence.
(3) Proceedings for an offence under sections 31 and 32 may be brought and prosecuted by the Minister.
(4) Notwithstanding section 10(4) of the Petty Sessions (Ireland) Act, 1851, proceedings for an offence under this Act may be instituted within 12 months from the date of the offence.
34.—The Minister shall, not earlier than 2 years and not later than 3 years after the commencement of this Act, after consultation with persons whom he or she considers to be representative of employers generally and persons whom he or she considers to be representative of employees generally, conduct a review of the operation of this Act and shall prepare a report in writing of the findings of the review and shall cause copies of the report to be laid before each House of the Oireachtas.