KEJAN HAYNES
Lead Editor- Newsgathering
The Government plans sweeping changes to the Retrenchment and Severance Benefits Act to prevent employers from avoiding severance payments through insolvency, temporary layoffs or staggered job cuts, Labour Minister Leroy Baptiste announced at a press conference at UNC headquarters on Sunday.
Minister Baptiste said the amendments to the 1985 legislation would redefine redundancy, modernise compensation rates and establish a guaranteed Severance Benefit Fund, while ensuring all retrenched workers qualify for benefits, regardless of company size or the method used to terminate employment.
He said the existing law had been exploited to the disadvantage of workers, leaving many without recourse when companies closed, claimed insolvency or placed employees on prolonged “temporary” layoff.
“Redundancy is deemed to be essentially surplus labour only, and therefore, an employer could have easily avoided any obligation to workers,” Minister Baptiste said.
Under the proposed changes, redundancy would be expanded to include insolvency, receivership and discontinuation of operations, giving workers a right to severance benefits even when a business shuts down.
A key amendment would introduce a guaranteed severance benefit fund, aligned with ILO Convention 173, requiring employers from the outset of employment to set aside funds to cover severance liabilities.
Another change would remove the current threshold requiring five or more workers to be retrenched before the Act applies. Minister Baptiste said employers had been able to send home workers in small batches to avoid obligations. Under the amendments, the Act would apply even if a single worker is retrenched.
The government also plans to close what the Labour Minister described as a major loophole around temporary layoffs. Employers would be required to follow a formal procedure, and workers placed on layoff for more than 90 days would gain an entitlement to severance benefits.
Compensation rates, unchanged since 1985, also would be overhauled. Minister Baptiste said the existing formula is outdated and no longer reflects economic realities.
“Right now, if you are less than one year and three to five years, you would be entitled to two weeks’ pay, and anything five years and more, three weeks’ pay per year,” he explained.
The proposal under consideration would move to three weeks’ pay per year for one to five years’ service, and four weeks’ pay per year for workers with more than five years’ service, subject to review by the Attorney General’s Office.
Minister Baptiste linked the retrenchment reforms to a broader legislative package, including amendments to expand maternity protection and introduce paid leave for fathers and adoptive parents, saying the changes were aimed at protecting families as well as individual workers.
Some 279 private sector workers were retrenched between January 14 and August 18, 2025, according to figures from the Ministry of Labour provided in response to a Freedom of Information Act request.
During the period, 27 companies conducted retrenchment exercises, and the Ministry received 34 physical notices under the Retrenchment and Severance Benefits Act.
