Proposed amendments to the Employment Service Act (就業服務法) drew fire from labor brokers yesterday, with an industry advocacy group saying that allowing foreign blue-collar workers vacations would increase labor costs and conflicts.
“While the new rules are being touted as helping employers, in reality they will only serve to increase costs,” said Chang Tien-yung (張添勇), president of the Taipei Employment Service Institute Association, which represents labor brokers.
Amendments to the act passed by the Legislative Yuan’s Social Welfare and Environmental Hygiene Committee last month eliminate the requirement that blue-collar foreign workers leave the nation every three years, while granting them the right to ask for time off to return to their home countries.
The requirement has drawn criticism because foreign workers wishing to return to their countries have to pay new brokerage fees worth several months of salary, even if they return to the same employer and job.
Amendment sponsor Wu Yu-chin (吳玉琴), a Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) legislator, has said that new requirements could help employers eliminate the inconvenience of the “empty window period” they previously faced every three years, as well as eliminating complicated application requirements by allowing them to directly continue their contracts with foreign workers.
Chang said the requirements would create additional trouble for employers because they would still be obligated to grant workers substantial leave to return home, while also raising the possibility that workers would use their new rights to put pressure on factory owners for additional benefits.
“They would choose to ask for time off collectively during the busiest part of the production cycle and you would not have the right to refuse,” he said, adding that employers would also face new obligations to pay workers severance pay.
Employers have been able to use the three-year exit requirement to avoid paying severance pay because it automatically terminates worker contracts, he said, adding that many employers use the requirement to gradually weed out unqualified workers by choosing not to hire them again.
With the end of the requirement, employers would be forced to fire and award severance pay to any workers who they did not want to continue to employ, he said, adding that most factories do not face serious “empty window periods,” because they hire workers incrementally in cycles.
Review of the amendments by the Legislative Yuan’s general assembly is scheduled for this week, along with a possible vote.
Taiwan yesterday condemned the recent increase in Chinese coast guard-escorted fishing vessels operating illegally in waters around the Pratas Islands (Dongsha Islands, 東沙群島) in the South China Sea. Unusually large groupings of Chinese fishing vessels began to appear around the islands on Feb. 15, when at least six motherships and 29 smaller boats were sighted, the Coast Guard Administration (CGA) said in a news release. While CGA vessels were dispatched to expel the Chinese boats, Chinese coast guard ships trespassed into Taiwan’s restricted waters and unsuccessfully attempted to interfere, the CGA said. Due to the provocation, the CGA initiated an operation to increase
A crowd of over 200 people gathered outside the Taipei District Court as two sisters indicted for abusing a 1-year-old boy to death attended a preliminary hearing in the case yesterday afternoon. The crowd held up signs and chanted slogans calling for aggravated penalties in child abuse cases and asking for no bail and “capital punishment.” They also held white flowers in memory of the boy, nicknamed Kai Kai (剴剴), who was allegedly tortured to death by the sisters in December 2023. The boy died four months after being placed in full-time foster care with the
A Taiwanese woman on Sunday was injured by a small piece of masonry that fell from the dome of St Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican during a visit to the church. The tourist, identified as Hsu Yun-chen (許芸禎), was struck on the forehead while she and her tour group were near Michelangelo’s sculpture Pieta. Hsu was rushed to a hospital, the group’s guide to the church, Fu Jing, said yesterday. Hsu was found not to have serious injuries and was able to continue her tour as scheduled, Fu added. Mathew Lee (李世明), Taiwan’s recently retired ambassador to the Holy See, said he met
The Shanlan Express (山嵐號), or “Mountain Mist Express,” is scheduled to launch on April 19 as part of the centennial celebration of the inauguration of the Taitung Line. The tourism express train was renovated from the Taiwan Railway Corp’s EMU500 commuter trains. It has four carriages and a seating capacity of 60 passengers. Lion Travel is arranging railway tours for the express service. Several news outlets were invited to experience the pilot tour on the new express train service, which is to operate between Hualien Railway Station and Chihshang (池上) Railway Station in Taitung County. It would also be the first tourism service