Decree-Law 48 of 4 May 2023, so-called “Decreto Lavoro“, which came into force on 5 May, lays down new measures to, inter alia, simplify the employment disclosure requirements to which companies are subject under the so-called “Decreto Trasparenza” (Legislative Decree 104/2022).
Unlike in the past, some of the information that employers were bound to provide in detail in the employment contract or in a specific policy (length of probationary period, training, paid holidays and leaves, notice of dismissal and resignation, components of remuneration, working hours, overtime, social-security and insurance institutions) may now be given to workers just by referring to the relevant provision of law or of the collective agreement that applies to the employment, including the company agreement. For simplification purposes, and in order to ensure uniformity in the employer’s communications, the latter shall deliver and make available to workers, including through publication on the website, the national, local and company collective agreements, as well as any company rules that apply to the employment.
On 4 May 2023, Italian Decree Law No 48/2023 (the ‘Employment Decree’ (‘Decreto Lavoro’)) containing ‘Urgent measures for social inclusion and access to the workplace’ was published in the Italian Official Gazette.
The Decree introduced important initiatives on employment law, social security and social assistance, with effect from 5 May 2023.
One of the main initiatives in the employment law field are changes to the permitted reasons for fixed-term employment contracts, with a strengthening of the role of collective bargaining.
The permitted reasons justifying a fixed-term contract of between 12 and 24 months, the extension for more than 12 months, or the renewal of a fixed-term contract are exclusively those provided for by the collective agreements concluded by the associations comparatively more representative at national level, or in the absence of such provisions and until 30 April 2024, the individual parties, for technical, organisational and production needs.
The Decree also simplifies the employer’s information obligations introduced by the ‘Transparency Decree’.
In contrast to the past, some of the information that the employer was required to provide in the employment contract or in a specific information notice can now be provided to employees simply by referring to the relevant legislation or collective bargaining agreement, which may also be the company’s bargaining agreement, applied to the employment relationship. This information relates to, for example, probationary period duration, training, paid holidays and leave, notice of dismissal and resignation, salary components, working hours, overtime, social security and insurance institutions.
To simplify the obligation, and to ensure uniformity in the employer’s communications, the employer will be required to deliver or make available to staff, including through publication on the website, national, regional and company collective bargaining agreements, as well as any company regulations applicable to the employment relationship.
The employer’s information obligations on the use of automated decision-making and monitoring systems have also been reduced, thus further simplifying these information obligations.
Further measures introduced by the Decree concern:
The Decree also provided a series of measures relating to social security and assistance, aimed above all at supporting youth employment, promoting the permanent integration into the labour market of beneficiaries of the Inclusion Allowance and reducing the ‘tax wedge’ (cuneo fiscale).
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Transparency Decree: new obligations for the employer
On 24 January 2023, the Italian Data Protection Authority (Autorità Garante per la protezione dei dati personali, the ‘Authority’) provided some interpretative and operational guidelines on data protection, which arose following the entry into force of Italian Legislative Decree of 27 June 2022, No 104 (also known as the ‘Transparency Decree’).
As is well-known, Article 1-bis of the Transparency Decree identified specific information obligations in the event of use of automated decision-making or monitoring tools, used to provide information (i) relevant for the purposes of recruitment or assignment, management or termination of the employment relationship, assignment of tasks or duties, or (ii) affecting the monitoring, assessment, performance and fulfilment of the contractual obligations of workers.
In this context, by means of the clarification under consideration, the Authority has identified both some additional information that the employer must provide to the data subject – in addition, therefore, to what is already provided for in Articles 13 and 14 of Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (the ‘GDPR’) – and some operational guidelines specifying the scope of the articles just mentioned.
Additional information includes: (i) the aspects of the employment relationship that are affected by the use of automated decision-making or monitoring systems; (ii) the operation of such systems; (iii) the main parameters used to program or train automated decision-making or monitoring systems, including performance evaluation mechanisms; (iv) the control measures adopted for automated decision-making or monitoring systems, any correction processes and the quality management system manager; (v) the level of accuracy, robustness and cybersecurity of the automated decision-making or monitoring systems and the metrics used to measure those metrics, as well as the potentially discriminatory impacts of those metrics.
In addition, each controller must, by way of example but not limited to:
Furthermore, if systems are used which give rise to exclusively automated decision-making processes which produce legal effects or which significantly affect the data subject, the employer will also have to evaluate alternative solutions which allow the worker to exercise the right to obtain human intervention, to express his or her point of view or to contest the decision.
In the light of the above, employers will have to carry out analyses and assessments of company processes to identifying the presence of the systems described, so as to develop and identify the activities to be adopted on a case-by-case basis, in order to ensure compliance with the regulations, both in the field of employment law and data protection.
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On 24 January 2023, the Personal Data Protection Authority (the “Authority”) gave the first interpretative and operative indications on the processing by employers of employees’ personal data using automated decision-making or monitoring systems aimed at providing information (i) that is relevant for the recruitment or appointment; for the management or termination of the employment; for the assignment of tasks or duties; or (ii) that affects the supervision, assessment, and performance of employees and the fulfilment of their contractual obligations. Under Legislative Decree 104/2022, the so-called “Transparency Decree”, in fact, any employer using one or more of the above instruments must provide the interested workers with supplementary information in addition to that required under articles 13 and 14 of the GDPR (Regulation (EU) 2016/679). In light of, inter alia, the latest indications of the Authority, this implies that employers need to check the internal processes of the reference organisations for the presence of any such system, and accordingly develop and define the necessary actions to be taken in order to ensure compliance with labour law and data protection legislation.
In addition to information already provided by the National Labour Inspectorate (circular no. 4 of 10 August 2022), the Ministry of Labour, with this circular, outlined the application of the new information requirements introduced by Legislative Decree no. 104 of 27 June 2022 “Transparency Decree”).
As already noted in National Labour Inspectorate Circular no. 4/2022, the employer must provide the worker with the basic information on individual provisions under the new Art. 1 of Legislative Decree 152/1997. For detailed information, they can refer to the collective agreement or company documents that must be delivered or made available to the worker under company practice.
According to the Ministry, the underlying basis of the reform is to broaden and strengthen the information obligations, but this must be set within the employment relationship, emphasising that the information obligation cannot “be considered fulfilled by abstractly referring to the legal provisions regulating the terms under information obligation. This must be done by providing information on the legal practical application of these measure on the parties’ relationship. This can be done by referring to the collective agreement applicable to the employment contract.”
As part of the new employer information obligations, the circular explained specific profiles, as follows.
For information on the “employee leave duration and other paid leave, (if this cannot be specified, the methods used to define and take leave)”, the Ministry clarified that:
The Ministry clarified the following for the obligation to inform the worker of “the initial remuneration or remuneration and its components, specifying the payment period and method.”
The employer must inform on “ordinary working hours, overtime conditions and remuneration, and conditions for changing shifts, if the employment contract includes predictable working hours.”
Art. 1-bis of Legislative Decree no. 152/1997, inserted by Article 4, letter b) of the Transparency Decree, requires employer additional information obligations if they use automated decision-making or monitoring systems.
In its circular, the Ministry of Labour clarified that the decree identifies two different mandatory information cases, if the employer uses automated decision-making or monitoring systems that:
The circular provides several examples for letter a) cases where the disclosure obligations under Art. 1 bis apply, namely:
the provision under letter b), includes “guidelines impacting the monitoring, assessment, performance and fulfilment of workers’ contractual obligations.” According to the Ministry, the employer must inform the worker of such automated systems, such as: tablets, digital devices and wearables, GPS and geotracking, facial recognition, rating and ranking systems, etc.
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Legislative Decree No. 104 of June 27, 2022 implementing EU Directive No. 2019/1152 on transparent and predictable working conditions in the territory of the European Union was published in the Official Gazette on July 29, 2022.
The decree adds additional information obligations to those hitherto provided for by Legislative Decree No. 152/1997, providing for an extension of the mandatory information to be provided to the employee at the time of recruitment, of the range of recipients of information obligations, as well as specific sanctions in case of delay or non-compliance.
Specifically, the employer will have to include in the employment contract information regarding: the training provided, vacation time, paid leave, notice periods in the event of dismissal or resignation and the relevant procedure, the scheduling of normal working hours, the collective agreement, including the company agreement, applied to the employment relationship, with the indication of the parties who signed it, the entities and institutions that receive the social security and insurance contributions due from the employer, and any form of social security protection provided by the employer.
These disclosure requirements will apply with respect to workers hired after August 12, 2022, as well as, if requested by the worker, with respect to relationships already in force prior to that date.
The new provisions, apply, where applicable, also in the context of: supply contracts, occasional service contracts, domestic work relationships, subject to specific exceptions, and to maritime and fishing work relationships, subject to the special regulations in force on the matter.
In addition to the above, the decree then provides for additional and even more detailed information requirements for employers who use automated monitoring and decision-making systems, imposing the obligation to inform workers about the use of such systems intended to provide relevant indications for the purposes of recruitment or assignment, management or termination of the employment relationship, assignment of tasks or duties, as well as indications affecting the supervision, evaluation, performance and fulfillment of workers’ contractual obligations.
Considering the complexity of the new provision, the National Labor Inspectorate and the Ministry of Labor and Social Policy issued two circulars with the aim of clarifying some interpretative doubts raised regarding the application of the new provision.
In the first circular dated August 10, 2022, the Inspectorate clarified that the detailed regulations regarding the institutions under the Transparency Decree may be communicated to the worker through reference to the applied collective agreement or other company documents, if the same are simultaneously delivered to the worker or made available in accordance with company practice.
Lastly, in Circular No. 19 of September 20, 2022, the Ministry of Labor clarified that for the purpose of fulfilling the information obligation, the abstract reference to legal regulations is not sufficient. In fact, it is necessary to make clear to the worker how, in concrete, the legal provisions in the employment relationship act, including by referring to the collective bargaining agreement applicable to the employment contract. Moreover, with this circular, the Ministry of Labor has outlined the range of institutes to be included in the list of those indicated by the legislator in a rather general way.
Legislative Decree no. 104 of 27 June 2022, implementing EU Directive no. 2019/1152 on transparent and predictable working conditions was published in the Official Gazette
With the publication in the Official Gazette on 29 July 2022, the new provisions set out in Legislative Decree no. 104 of 27 June 2022, implementing EU Directive no. 2019/1152 on transparent and predictable working conditions in the European Union officially entered into force on 13 August.
The decree supplements the information obligations under Legislative Decree no. 152/1997, which extends mandatory information to be provided to the worker when hired, the range of recipients of the information obligations, and penalties for cases of delay or non-compliance.
The measure introduced the “Minimum requirements on working conditions”, in Chapter III. These concerned the probationary period, combination of jobs, minimum job predictability, compulsory training, and transition to more predictable, stable and secure forms of work.
Chapter IV identifies the protective measures for the worker if there are violations of the new obligations introduced by the legislation.
The decree partly regulates the right to information about the essential elements of the employment relationship and working conditions by introducing new information obligations for the employer. These will apply to new hires after 1 August 2022 and can include the relationships in place before that date at the worker’s request.
Employers for employment contracts (open-ended or fixed term; full-time or part-time or temporary), staff leasing contracts, and occasional service contracts are recipients of new reporting obligations. The obligations apply to domestic labour relations subject to exceptions and maritime and fishing employment subject to any applicable special regulations.
Further parties obliged to provide information on the employment relationship essential elements are principals who stipulate contracts for continuative and coordinated services under Art. 409, paragraph 1, no. 3, Code of Civil Procedure and work contracts with predominantly personal and continuous services organised by the principal under Art. 2, paragraph 1, Legislative Decree no. 81/2015.
The decree applies to employment relationships of public administrations and public economic entities.
This decree broadly covers most applications and only excludes a few contractual types. It excludes self-employment relationships, contracts with a working time equal to or less than an average of three hours weekly in four consecutive weeks, agency relationships, employment relationships in family businesses and some special public employment relationships.
The decree expands the range of mandatory information that employers must provide to workers.
Without referring to the law or collective labour agreement, in addition to the employment relationship typical information (parties’ identity, place of work, classification, worker level and qualification, employment relationship start and end date), the employer must provide a series of additional information including:
– the identity of the user companies for workers employed by a staff leasing agency;
– probationary period duration;
– the right to receive any training by the employer;
– the duration of holiday leave and other paid leave to which the worker is entitled;
– termination notice procedure, form and terms sent by the employer or worker;
– any remuneration or compensation initial amount and its components, and payment period and method;
– ordinary working hours, overtime conditions and remuneration, and conditions for changing shifts, if the employment contract includes predictable working hours.
– the collective agreement, including the company agreement, applied to the employment relationship, specifying the parties that signed it;
– the bodies and institutions receiving the social security and insurance contributions and social security protection provided by the employer.
Where the employment relationship has unpredictable organisational arrangements or does not provide for ordinary scheduled working hours, the employer shall inform the employee about:
– working hours variability, the minimum amount of guaranteed paid hours and the remuneration for work performed in addition to the guaranteed hours;
– the reference working hours and days;
– the minimum notice period to which the worker is entitled before starting work and the period within which the employer may cancel the assignment, where permitted by the type of contract and if agreed.
The information referred to above must be provided in writing by the employer by handing over to the worker, at the time the relationship was established and before the work start date, either the employment contract or the copy of the employment establishment notice. Alternatively, the employer may provide the worker with a separate notice containing the above information, within seven days of the relationship start date. The information is kept and made accessible at any time at the worker’s request.
As an exception to the above and only for specific information (e.g.: duration of leave for holidays and other paid leave, right to training, where applicable, procedure, form and terms of notice, collective agreement, any company agreement, and social security and insurance institutions that receive contributions), the employer may provide it within 30 days of the employment start date.
If the employment ends before a month from the employment start date, the worker must be given a written statement containing the information, at the time of termination, if this obligation has not been fulfilled.
The information obligations apply, at the worker’s written request, to existing employment relationships on 1 August, and the employer or principal must fulfil the information obligations under the decree within 60 days.
The decree includes more detailed information obligations for employers who use automated monitoring and decision-making systems. They must inform workers about systems which provide data relevant to the recruitment or assignment, management or employment relationship termination, assignment of tasks or duties, or data affecting the monitoring, assessment, performance, and fulfilment of worker contractual obligations.
Before the employment start date the employer shall also provide further information concerning:
– Employment relationship aspects which are affected by the systems;
– systems’ purposes and aims;
– systems’ logic and operation;
– categories of data and main parameters used to plan or train systems, including performance assessment mechanisms;
– controls on automated decisions, correction processes and quality management system manager;
– level of accuracy robustness and cybersecurity of the systems, metrics used and their potentially discriminatory impact.
The employer must supplement the information by providing employees with data security instructions and update the processing operations register on automated decision-making and monitoring. Tools used must be compliant with the GDPR and to check this, the employer/principal must carry out a risk analysis and an impact assessment of the processing operations. In some cases, they may require a Data Protection Authority prior consultation.
The employer must inform the worker, 24 hours in advance, of any change affecting the above information, which entails changes in the working conditions.
The above information must be sent to any RSA or RSUs (trade union representatives) established in the company or, failing that, to the trade union associations’ local offices that are comparatively more representative at a national level.
Specific information obligations are provided for worker’s posted abroad to an EU Member State or third-party country, as part of a transnational provision of services.
The information to be provided, prior to departure, concerns:
– the country or countries where the relationship is to be carried out and expected duration;
– remuneration currency;
– any additional benefits in cash or in kind;
– conditions governing repatriation;
– the remuneration to which the worker is entitled under the law applicable in the Member State;
– allowances for the posting and arrangements for reimbursing travel, board, and lodging expenses;
– the address of the institutional website of the host Member State where the information on the posting is published.
The employer and principal must inform the worker of any contractual modification, no later than the day before the changes take effect. This obligation does not apply to those changes that result directly from the amendment of legislative or regulatory provisions or applicable collective agreement terms.
Failure to comply, delay, incomplete or inaccurate compliance with the reporting obligations could result in an administrative penalty ranging from € 250 to € 1,500 for each worker. This is subject to the worker’s complaint and an inspection.
Chapter III of the decree introduced important changes to several labour law provisions, including (i) probationary period; (ii) employment relationship exclusivity; (iii) minimum job predictability; (iv) transition to more predictable, secure and stable forms of employment; and (v) compulsory training.
The decree states that any probationary period maximum duration may not exceed six months. This is without prejudice to a shorter duration required by collective agreements.
The probationary period proportionality concept was introduced for fixed-term contracts, which states that the probationary period duration must be proportional to the contract duration and tasks connected to the type of employment.
If there is a fixed-term contract renewal for the performance of the same duties, the employment relationship is not subject to a new probationary period.
Any events interrupting the relationship, particularly, illness, accident, compulsory maternity, or paternity leave result in a probationary period extension equivalent to the absence.
Art. 8 of the decree introduced changes to the combination of jobs, i.e., the better known “exclusivity clause” which entitled the employer to prohibit the employee from carrying out a different profession.
Without prejudice to the employee’s obligation not to carry out work in competition with the employer, the latter may only prohibit other work when performed outside the agreed schedule if one of the following conditions exists:
– an impairment of the worker’s health and safety (including compliance with working time regulations);
– the need to guarantee the public service integrity;
– a conflict of interest between the additional and main work, even if there is not a breach of the duty of loyalty.
The same rules apply to principals as part of continuative and coordinated service contracts under Art. 409, paragraph 1, no. 3, Code of Civil Procedure, contracts with predominantly personal and continuous services organised by the principal under Art. 2, paragraph 1, Legislative Decree no. 81/2015.
Continue reading the full version published in Modulo24 Contenzioso Lavoro (Form24 Labour Litigation of Il Sole 24 ore.
Chapter III of Legislative Decree 104/2022, implementing the European Transparency Directive 2019/1152, published in the “Official Gazette” 176 of 29 July and in force since 13 August, identified the minimum working conditions requirements. The first provision related to the probationary period maximum duration (Article 7), emphasises certain case law existing principles. The probationary period may not exceed six months unless the collective agreement applied to the relationship requires a shorter duration. The probationary period in fixed-term contracts must be proportionate to the contract duration, and the tasks assigned based on the employment type. If there is a contract renewal for the same tasks, a new probationary period may not be imposed.
If there are suspensions (such as illness, accident and compulsory leave), the probationary period duration is extended to a time equal to the employee’s absence.
One of the decree changes refers to the combination of jobs (Article 8), i.e., the better known “exclusivity clause” which entitled the employer to prohibit the employee from carrying out a different profession. For the first time, the decree forbids the employer (and the principal) from preventing the employee from carrying out another job outside the agreed working hours or treat them unfavourably for that reason. Exceptions can be applied if the second job is detrimental to the worker’s health and safety (including compliance with rest regulations) or does not guarantee the integrity of the public service or is in conflict of interest with the main job (but not in breach of the loyalty duty).
Another change concerns the minimum predictability of work (Article 9). The employer may not require the employee to perform work if working hours are not predetermined. The employee has the right to refuse to work, without suffering any prejudice, including disciplinary action.
Continue reading the full version published on Il Quotidiano del Lavoro of Il Sole 24 Ore.