Labor Week 3 Upload
Labor Week 3 Upload
Labor Standards
Article 83. Normal hours of work. The normal hours of work of any employee shall not
exceed eight (8) hours a day.
The Eight-hour Labor Law was enacted not only to safeguard the health and
welfare of the laborer or employee, but in a way to minimize unemployment by forcing
employers, in cases where more than 8-hour operation is necessary to utilize different
shifts of laborers or employees working only for 8 hours each.
It is not prohibited to have normal hours of work of less than eight hours a day.
What the law regulates is work hours exceeding eight - it prescribes the maximum but
not the minimum.
Art. 83 do not say that the normal hours of work is or should be eight hours but
that it shall not exceed eight.
Broken Hours
Compressed workweek
It is a scheme where the normal workweek is reduced to less than 6 days but
the total number of work-hours of 48 hours per week shall remain.
The normal workday is increased to more than 8 hours but not to exceed 12
hours, without corresponding overtime premium. The concept can be adjusted
accordingly depending on the normal workweek of the company
Requisites:
The validity of the reduction of working hours can be upheld when the
arrangement is:
1. Temporary
2. It is a more humane solution instead of a retrenchment of personnel;
3. There is notice and consultations with the workers and supervisors;
4. A consensus is reached on how to deal with deteriorating economic conditions;
and
5. It is sufficiently proven that the company was suffering from losses.
1. Reduction of workdays: Where the normal work days per week are reduced but
should not last for more than six (6) months.
2. Rotation of workers: where the employees are rotated or alternately provided
work within the workweek
3. Forced leave: where the employees are required to go on leave for several days
or weeks, utilizing their leave credits if there are any.
4. Broken-time schedule: where the work schedule is not continuous but the
number of work hours within the day or week is not reduced.
5. Flexi-holiday schedule: where the employees agree to avail themselves of the
holidays on some other days, provided that there is no diminution of existing
benefits as a result of such arrangement.
Working Time:
Working time is one during which an employee is actually working. It may include an
instance when an employee is not actually working but he is required to be present in
the employer’s premises. Thus, the fact that he is required to be present although not
actually doing any work, is still deemed working time.
Note: Travel time, when beneficial to the employer is compensable (Rada vs. NLRC)
1. All hours which the employee is required to give to his employer regardless of
whether or not such hours are spent in productive labor or involve physical or
mental exertion.
2. Rest period is excluded from hours worked, even if employee does not leave his
workplace, it being enough that:
a. He stops working
b. May rest completely
c. May leave his workplace, to go elsewhere, whether within or outside the
premises of the workplace.
A. Waiting Time:
General Rule: Normal travel from home to work is not working time.
Exceptions:
a. Emergency call outside his regular working hours where he is required
to travel to his regular place of business or some other work site.
b. Done through a conveyance provided by the employer.
c. Done under the supervision and control of the employer.
d. Done under vexing and dangerous circumstances.
2. Travel that is all in a day’s work - time spent in travel as part of the employees
principal activity.
Example: Travel from job site to hob site during the work day, must be counted
as working hours.
General Rule:
a. Travel that requires an overnight stay on the part of the employee when it
cuts across the employee’s workday is clearly working time.
b. The time is not only hours worked on regular workdays but also during
corresponding working hours on non-working days. Outside of these regular
working hours, travel away from home is not considered working time.
Sleeping time
In the absence of an agreement, it will depend upon the nature of the service
and its relation to the working time.
Compensable: If sleeping time is subject to serious interruption or takes place under
conditions substantially less desirable than would be likely to exist at the employer’s
home.
It is compensable working time if the nature of the employee’s work allows sleeping
without interrupting or prejudicing the performance of his work.
Power Interruptions
- Brownouts of short duration but not exceeding 20 minutes shall be treated as worked or
compensable hours whether used productively by the employees or not;
- Brownouts running for more than 20minutes may not be treated as hours worked
provided that any of the following conditions are present:
a. The employees can leave their work place or go elsewhere whether within or
without the work premises; or
b. The employees can use the time effectively for their own interest.