Dáil debates

Wednesday, 28 February 2024

Employment (Collective Redundancies and Miscellaneous Provisions) and Companies (Amendment) Bill 2023: Report and Final Stages

 

3:25 pm

Photo of Louise O'ReillyLouise O'Reilly (Dublin Fingal, Sinn Fein) | Oireachtas source

I move amendment No. 3:

In page 13, after line 32, to insert the following:

“Amendment of Act of 2014

28.The Act of 2014 is amended by the insertion of the following sections after section 621: “Power of the Court to return assets which have been improperly transferred

621A.(1) The court has the following power where, on the application of the Minister or the liquidator and/or employee representative and employees’ recognised trade union in respect of a situation in which collective redundancies have arisen in circumstances in which the employer is insolvent, it can be shown that—
(a) the employer is unable to fully discharge the debts owing to the employees,

(b) any property of the company of any kind whatsoever was disposed of either by way of conveyance, transfer mortgage, security, loan or in any way whatsoever whether by act or omission, direct or indirect, and

(c) the effect of such a disposal is to perpetrate a fraud on the company’s employees by leaving inadequate resources to discharge the entitlements of the employees who are subsequently made redundant as a result of the employer’s insolvency.
(2) The power of the court is to order, if it deems it just and equitable to do so, any person who appears to have—
(a) the use, control or possession of the property concerned, or

(b) the proceeds of the sale or development of that property, to deliver it or them, or pay any sum in respect thereof, to the liquidator on such terms or conditions as the court thinks fit.
(3) If the Minister makes a payment to employees pursuant to section 10 of the Protection of Employees (Employers’ Insolvency) Act 1984, then the Minster shall have the right to make an application under subsection (1) in order to recover the sum expended.

Preferential Creditor status for employees

621B. (1)Assets or value accrued pursuant to section 621A, form part of the assets of the employer for the purposes of the liquidation and shall be distributed in accordance with section 621.

(2) Notwithstanding the generality of the foregoing, payments due to discharge the entitlements of the employees who have been made redundant as a result of the employer’s insolvency shall have priority to all other debts.”.”.

I thank the Minister of State and, with no disrespect to him, I particularly thank his officials who have been generous with their time and information, have worked with us and been brilliant. I appreciate that the Minister of State's officials have communicated the Government position and the implications of the legal advice. However, I want to press this amendment.

The amendment seeks to provide protection for employees in collective redundancy cases where the employer is insolvent and to give power to the High Court to return assets that have been improperly transferred and to give preferential status to employees. It builds on the recommendations of the Duffy Cahill report to ensure that limited liability and corporate restructuring are not used to avoid a company's obligations to its workers.

For years, workers, trade unions, and Opposition politicians have been seeking legislative protections for workers' collective agreements. The Government outlined its intentions to deliver legislative improvements in the area through this Bill. While any improvement in this area is welcome, Sinn Féin has been clear the Bill does not address the situation whereby workers are treated as unsecured creditors for the purposes of their collectively bargained redundancy agreements. This means debt to the workers is not prioritised along the same lines as wages and statutory redundancy. This matter should be addressed, and it is for that reason I propose this amendment.

During collective redundancy cases in the event of liquidation, the phrase “a company's obligations to its employees” is used frequently used, as it was used in the Duffy Cahill report, and it is on this point that I am focusing with this amendment. We cannot have companies engaging in what are known as tactical insolvencies, whereby they break a company up into different components, sell off the parts that are profitable and walk away with the money, leaving the operational parts intact and the State and workers having to shoulder all the liabilities. On several occasions, we have seen tactical liquidations used by companies to make workers immediately redundant and deny them their collective redundancy entitlements. While every situation is unique, the overarching aim of what was done with Debenhams, Clerys, Paris Bakery, TalkTalk, and La Senza, to name a few, was to defraud workers and, effectively, the State. Therefore, I hope there will be support for this amendment, which seeks to prioritise workers in these horrendous situations.

It will not be lost on the Minister of State and is not lost on other people that every time an issue like those mentioned hits the headlines, people ramble into the Dáil Chamber or up to a microphone and say we need to take action to ensure this cannot happen again. That is precisely what this amendment seeks to do. Workers who have been in this situation will say, to a man or woman, they felt they were not a priority and that other people were well ahead of them in the queue, people who had not given decades of service as many workers had. For that reason and on their behalf, I propose this amendment.

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