9 July 2020
Ordinances No. 2020-460 of 22 April 2020 and No. 2020-507 of 2 May 2020 and Decrees No. 2020-508 and No. 2020-509 of 2 May 2020: Works Council (CSE) consultations in light of the Covid-19 health crisis
Ordinance No. 2020-460 of 22 April 2020 provides for two provisions relating to the Works Council (CSE):
New Ordinance No. 2020-507 of 2 May 2020 amended the aforementioned Ordinance of 22 April, thereby excluding collective dismissal plans (plan de sauvegarde de l'emploi - PSE) and collective performance agreements from the measures to reduce consultation and expertise time-limits. It also introduces a reduction of the time-limits for communicating the agenda to the Works Council's members, and provides for the ability to interrupt ongoing consultations and to initiate a new procedure applying the derogatory consultation time-limits.
By way of derogation, the time-limits for communicating the agenda for the Works Council's or Central Works Council's (CSE central) meetings relating to the employer's measures aimed at dealing with the economic, financial and social consequences of the spread of the Covid-19 epidemic, shall be reduced.
Thus, the agenda (i) of the Works Council is communicated by the WC’s president at least 2 days (instead of 3 days) before the meeting; and (ii) that of the Central Works Council is communicated to its members at least 3 days (instead of 8 days) before the meeting.
However, these time-limits shall not apply to information and consultation meetings held in the context of:
These provisions are applicable to time-limits starting to run between 3 May 2020 and 23 August 2020 (Decree No. 2020-509 of 2 May 2020).
These new time-limits replace the statutory and contractual time-limits: therefore, if a different time-limit to communicate the agenda is provided for in a collective bargaining agreement, this reduction also applies.
Article 9 of the Ordinance of 22 April provides that a decree shall define the time-limits relating to:
This therefore derogates from the applicable contractual provisions.
Ordinance of 2 May amending Article 9 of the Ordinance of 22 April, and the Decree of 2 May provide that these provisions are not applicable to the information and consultation procedures carried out as part of the following procedures:
Apart from these exceptions, the reduction of consultation and expertise procedures' time-limits does not exclusively apply to measures related to the end of the lockdown. Indeed, as the Ordinance relates to "the employer's decisions intended to deal with the economic, financial and social consequences of the spread of the epidemic", it applies to any consultation (and related expert assessment) for instance, or any other consultation relating to the general management of the company or related to the health, safety or working conditions, especially as the employer may choose to interrupt an ongoing consultation to apply the new time-limits.
The Decree of 2 May has drastically reduced the time-limits for Works Council's consultation, indeed:
Where the consultation involves one or several Works Council and the Central Works Council, the opinion of each establishment's Works Councils must be delivered and communicated within one day (instead of 7 days) before the date on which the Central Works Council is deemed to have been consulted.
Time-limits are similarly considerably reduced for the completion of expert assessments:
The Decree's provisions apply to the consultation time-limits which start running between 3 May 2020 (publication date) and 23 August 2020. Nonetheless, the Ordinance of 2 May provides that when the time-limits that started running before 3 May 2020 have not yet expired, the employer may interrupt the ongoing procedure and initiate, as from the same date, a new consultation procedure benefitting from the reduced time-limits.
Article 8 of the Ordinance of 22 April allows for the individualisation of partial activity or for the application of a non-uniform division of working hours or non-working hours (heures chômées) within the same establishment, department or workshop.
When this scheme results from the employer's unilateral decision, a "favourable opinion of the Works Council" is required and the document submitted to the Works Council must cover a number of aspects, such as the skills identified or objective criteria applied.
Agreements concluded and unilateral decisions will cease to have effect on 31 December 2020 at the latest.
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