Implementation of Tripartite Advisory for Managing Workplace Harassment
Ministry of ManpowerSpeakers
Summary
This question concerns the implementation of the Tripartite Advisory on Managing Workplace Harassment and the number of employers adopting specific policies and training programs. Minister for Manpower Lim Swee Say stated that the advisory is a non-prescriptive guide and that the Ministry does not track the specific number of companies that have adopted its measures. He highlighted that fewer than five of the 800 complaints lodged with TAFEP in the last three years involved harassment, all of which were investigated for corrective action. Additionally, tripartite partners have trained over 450 company representatives over the last two years to help employers manage and prevent harassment at work. Minister for Manpower Lim Swee Say concluded by urging workers to seek help through TAFEP or legal channels, such as the Police or the Courts.
Transcript
28 Mr Kok Heng Leun asked the Minister for Manpower how many employers have implemented the Tripartite Advisory for Managing Workplace Harassment, both in having a policy explicitly defining harassment, including sexual harassment, and setting out how it will be handled, as well as providing training to workers on how to prevent and respond to it.
Mr Lim Swee Say: The Tripartite Advisory on Managing Workplace Harassment was issued in December 2015 to serve as a practical guide for employers and employees to better prevent and manage harassment at the workplace. The advisory helps foster workplace environments where harassment is not tolerated and educates workers who face harassment on where to seek help, including remedies available under the Protection from Harassment Act.
Tripartite advisories are meant to provide a guide for employers and employees and are not prescriptive. We do not track how many companies have adopted the measures suggested in the advisories, including that on managing workplace harassment.
In the last three years, fewer than five of the 800 of the complaints lodged with the Tripartite Alliance for Fair and Progressive Employment Practices, or TAFEP, involved allegations of workplace harassment. Each of these complaints was looked into, with TAFEP advising the complainant on possible means to seek recourse. TAFEP also followed up with the employers, for substantiated complaints, to highlight the feedback received and advise them to take corrective actions where necessary.
On an ongoing basis, the National Trades Union Congress, Singapore National Employers Federation and TAFEP conduct regular courses to help employers adopt policies to prevent and manage workplace harassment. More than 450 company representatives have been trained over the last two years.
The Ministry of Manpower and TAFEP will continue to monitor the situation and take each report of alleged workplace harassment seriously. We urge workers who face workplace harassment to get help promptly. This includes reporting to the authorities, such as the Police, for criminal offences, or the Court for civil remedies.