NO.27
OF 1996
(19 th August, 1996)
An Act to regulate
the employment and conditions of service of building and other
construction workers and to provide for their safety , health
and welfare measures and other matters connected there with or
incidental thereto.
Comment: The aim of this Act is to
regulate the employment and conditions of service of building
and other construction workers and to provide for their safety
, health and welfare measures. BE it
enacted by Parliament in the Forty-seventy Year of the
Republic of India as follows:---
CHAPTER
1
PRELIMINARY
1.Short title, extent,
commencement and application.- (1) This Act may be called the
Building and Other Construction Workers (Regulation of
Employment and Conditions of Service) Act, 1996.
(2) It
extends to the whole of India.
(3) It shall be deemed
to have come into force on the 1st day of March,
1996.
(4) It applies to every establishment which
employs, or had employed on any day of the preceding twelve
months, ten or more building workers in any building or other
construction work.
Explanation.---For the purposes of
this sub-section, the building workers employed in different
relays in a day either by the employer or the contractor shall
be taken into account in computing the number of building
workers employed in the establishment.
2.Definitions.-
(1) In this Act, unless the context otherwise
requires,----
(a) "appropriate Government"
means,----
(i) in relation to an establishment (which
employs building workers either directly or through a
contractor) in respect of which the appropriate Government
under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (14 of 1947), is the
Central Government, the Central Government;
(ii) in
relation to any such establishment, being a public sector
undertaking, as the Central Government may by notification
specify which employs building workers either directly or
through a contractor, the Central
Government;
Explanation.---For the purposes of
sub-clause (ii), "public sector under taking" means any
corporation established by or under any Central, State or
Provincial Act or a Government company as defined in section
617 of the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956)which is owned,
controlled or managed by the Central Government.
(iii)
in relation to any other establishment which employs building
workers either directly or through a contractor, the
Government of the State in which that other establishment is
situate:
(b) "beneficiary" means a building workers
registered under section 12;
(c) "Board means a
Building and Other Construction Workers' Welfare Board
constituted under sub-section (1) of section 18;
(d)
"building or other construction work" means the construction,
alteration, repairs, maintenance or demolition, or, in
relation, to buildings, streets, roads, railways, tramways,
airfields, irrigation, drainage, embankment and navigation
works, flood control works (including storm water drainage
works), generation, transmission an distribution of power,
water works (including channels for distribution of water),
oil and gas installations, electric lines, wireless, radio,
television, telephone, telegraph and overseas communications,
dams, canals, reservoirs, watercourses, tunnels, bridges,
viaducts, aqueducts, pipelines, towers, cooling towers,
transmission towers and such other work as may be specified in
this behalf by the appropriate Government, by notification but
does not include and building or other construction work to
which the provisions of the Factories Act, 1948 (63 of 1948),
or the Mines Act, 1952 (35 of 1952), apply;
(e)
"building worker" means a person who is employed to do any
skilled, semi-skilled or unskilled, manual, supervisory,
technical or clerical work for hire or reward, whether the
terms of employment be expressed or implied, in connection
with any building or other construction work but does not
include any such person------
(i) who is employed
mainly in a managerial or administrative capacity;
or
(ii) who, being employed in a supervisory capacity,
draws wages exceeding one thousand six hundred rupees per
mensem or Exercises, either by the nature of the duties
attached to the office or by reason of he powers vested in
him, functions mainly or a managerial nature.
(f)
"Chief Inspector" means the Chief Inspector of Inspection of
Building and Construction appointed under sub-section (2) of
section 42.
(g) "Contractor" means a person who
undertakes to produce a given result for any establishment,
other than a mere supply of goods or articles of manufacture,
by the employment of building workers or who supplies building
workers for any work of the establishment; and includes a
sub-contractor;
(h) "Director-General" means the
Director-General of Inspection appointed under sub-section (1)
of section 42;
(i) "employer" in relation to an
establishment, means the owner thereof, and
includes,---
(i) in relation to a building or other
construction work carried on by or under the authority of any
department of the Government, directly without any contractor,
the authority specified in this behalf, or where on authority
is specified, the hear of the department;
(ii) in
relation to a building or other construction work carried on
by or on behalf of a local authority or other establishment,
directly without any contractor, the chief executive officer
of that authority or establishment;
(iii) in relation
to a building or other construction work carried on by or
thought a contractor , or by the employment of building
workers supplied by a contractor, the contractor;
(j)
"establishment" means any establishment belonging to, or under
the control of, Government, any body corporate or firm, an
individual or association or other body of individuals which
or who employs building workers in any building or other
construction work; and includes an establishment belonging to
a contractor, but does not include an individual who employs
such workers in any building or construction work in relation
to his own residence the total cost of such construction not
being more than rupees ten lakhs;
(k) "Fund" means the
Building and Other Construction Workers' Welfare Fund of a
Board constituted under sub-section (1) of section
24;
(l) "notification" means a notification published
in the Official Gazette;
(m) "prescribed" means
prescribed by rules made under this Act by the Central
Government or, as the case may be, the State
Government;
(n) "wages" shall have the same meaning as
assigned to it in clause (vi) of section 2 of the Payment of
Wages Act, 1936 (4 of 1936).
(2) Any reference in this
Act to any law which is not in force in any area shall, in
relation to that area, be construed as a reference to the
corresponding law, if any, in force in that
area.
CHAPTER II
THE ADVISORY COMMITTEES AND
EXPERS COMMITTEES
3.Central Advisory Committee.-
(1) The Central Government shall, as soon as may be,
constitute a Committee to be called the Central Building and
Other Construction Workers' Advisory Committee (hereinafter
referred to as the Central advisory Committee) to advise the
Central Government on such matters arising out of the
administration of this Act as may be referred to
it.
(2) The Central Advisory Committee shall consist
of---
(a) a Chairperson to be appointed by the Central
Government;
(b) three Members of Parliament of whom two
shall be elected by the House of the People and one by the
Council of States-----members;
(c) the
Director-General---member, ex officio;
(d) such number
of other members, not exceeding thirteen but not less than
nine, as the Central Government may nominate to represent the
employers, building workers, associations of architects,
engineers, accident insurance institutions and any other
interests which, in the opinion of the Central Government,
ought to be represented on the Central Advisory
Committee.
(3) The number of person to be appointed as
members from each of the categories specified in clause (d) of
sub-section (2), the term of office and other conditions of
service, of the procedure to be followed in the discharge of
their functions by, and the manner of filling vacancies among,
the members of the Central advisory Committee shall be such as
may be prescribed;
Provided that the members nominated
to represent the building workers shall not be less than the
number or members nominated to represent the
employers.
(4) It is hereby declared that the office of
member of the Central Advisory Committee shall not disqualify
its holder for being chosen as, or for being , a Member of
either House of Parliament.
4.State Advisory
Committee.- (1) The State Government shall constitute a
committee to be called the State Building and Other
Construction Workers' Advisory Committee (hereinafter referred
to as the State Advisory Committee) to advise the State
Government on such matters arising not of the administration
of this Act as may be referred to it.
(2) The State
Advisory Committee shall consist of----
(a) a
Chairperson to be appointed by the State
Government;
(b) two members of the State Legislature to
be elected from the State Legislature----members;
(c) a
members to be nominated by the Central Government;
(d)
the Chief Inspector---member, ex officio;
(e) such
number of other members, not exceeding eleven, but not less
than seven, as the State Government may nominate to represent
the employers, building workers, associations of architects,
engineers, accident insurance institutions and any other
interests which, in the opinion of the State Government, ought
to be represented on the Advisory Committee.
(3) The
number of persons to be appointed as members from each of the
categories specified in clause (e) of sub-section (2), the
term of office and other conditions o service of, the
procedure to be followed in the discharge of their functions
by, and the manner of filling vacancies among, the members of
State Advisory Committee shall be such as may be
prescribed:
Provided that the number of members
nominated to represent the building workers shall not be less
than the number of members nominated to represent the
employers.
5.Expert committees.- (1) The appropriate
Government may constitute one or more expert committees
consisting of persons specially qualified in building or other
construction work for advising the Government for making rules
under this Act.
(2) The members of the expert committee
shall be paid such fees and allowances for attending the
meetings of the committee as may be
prescribed;
Provided that no fee or allowances shall be
payable to a member who is an officer of Government or of any
body corporate established by or under any law for the time
being in force.
CHAPTER III
REGISTRATION OF
ESTABLISHMENTS
6.Appointment of registering
officers.- The appropriate Government may, by order notified
in the Official Gazette.---
(a) appoint such persons,
being Gazetted Officers of Government, as it thinks fit , to
be the registering officers for the purposes of this Act;
and
(b) define the limits within which a registering
officer shall exercise the powers conferred on him by or under
this Act.
7.Registration of establishments.- (1) Every
employer shall.---- (a) in relation to an establishment to
which this Act applies on its commencement, within a period of
sixty days from such commencement ; and
(b) in relation
to any other establishment to which this Act may be applicable
at any time after such commencement, within a period of sixty
days from the date on which this Act becomes applicable to
such establishment.
make an application to the
registering officer for the registration of such
establishment;
Provided that the registering officer
may entertain any such application after the expiry of the
periods aforesaid, if he is satisfied that the applicant was
prevented by sufficient cause from making the application
within such period.
(2) Every application under
sub-section (1) such be in such form and shall contain such
particulars and shall be accompanied by such fees as may be
prescribed.
(3) After the receipt of an application
under sub-section (1), the registering office shall register
the establishment and issue a certificate of registration to
the employer thereof in such form and within such time and
subject to such conditions as may be prescribed.
(4)
Where, after the registration of an establishment under this
section, any change occurs in the ownership or management or
other prescribed particulars in respect of such establishment,
the particulars regarding such changes shall be intimated by
the employer to the registering officer within thirty days of
such change in such form as may be
prescribed.
8.Revocation of registration in certain
cases.- If the registering officer is satisfied, either on a
reference made to him I this behalf or otherwise, that the
registration of any establishment has been obtained by
misrepresentation or suppression of any material fact or that
the provisions of this Act are not being complied with in
relation to any work carried on by such establishment, or that
for any other reason the registration has become useless or
ineffective and, therefore, requires to be revoked, he may,
after giving an opportunity to the employer of the
establishment to be heard, revoke the
registration.
9.Appeal.- (1) Any person aggrieved by an
order made under section 8 may, within thirty days from the
date on which the order is communicated to him, prefer an
appeal to the appellate officer who shall be a person
nominated in this behalf by the appropriate
Government;
Provided that the appellate officer may
entertain the appeal after the expiry of the said period of
thirty days if he is satisfied that the appellant was
prevented by sufficient cause from filing the appeal in
time.
(2) On receipt of an appeal under sub-section
(1), the appellate officer shall, after giving the appellant
an opportunity of being heard, confirm modify or reverse the
order of revocation as expeditiously as
possible.
10.Effect of non-registration.- No employer
of an establishment to which this Act applies
shall,----
(a) in the case of an establishment required
to be registered under section 7, but which has not been
registered under that section;
(b) in the case of an
establishment the registration in respect of which has been
revoked under section 8 and no appeal has been preferred
against such order of revocation under section 9 within the
period prescribed for the preferring of such appeal or where
an appeal has been so preferred, such appeal has been
dismissed.
employ building workers in the establishment
after the expiry of the period referred to in clause (a) or
clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section 7, or after the
revocation of registration under section 8 or after the expiry
of the period for preferring an appeal under section 9 or
after the dismissal of the appeal, as the case may
be.
CHAPTER IV
REGISTRATION OF BUILDING
WORKERS AS BENEFICIARIES
11.Beneficiaries of the
Fund.- Subject to the provisions of this Act, every building
workers registered as a beneficiary under this Act shall be
entitled to the benefits provided by the Board from its Fund
under this Act.
12.Registration of building workers as
beneficiaries.- (1) Every building worker who has completed
eighteen years of age, but has not completed sixty years of
age, and who has been engaged in any building or other
construction work for not less than ninety days during the
preceding twelve months shall be eligible for registration as
beneficiary under this Act.
(2) An application for
registration shall be made in such form, as may be prescribed,
to the officer authorised by the Board in this
behalf.
(3) Every application under sub-section (2)
shall be accompanied by such documents together with such fee
not exceeding fifty rupees as may be prescribed.
(4) If
the officer authorised by the Board under sub-section (2) is
satisfied that the applicant has complied with the provisions
of this Act and the rules made thereunder, he shall register
the name of the building workers as a beneficiary under this
Act;
Provided that an application for registration
shall not be rejected without giving the applicant an
opportunity of being heard.
(5) Any person aggrieved by
the decision under sub-section (4) may, within thirty days
from the date of such decision, prefer an appeal to the
Secretary of the Board or any other officer specified by the
Board in this behalf and the decision of the Secretary or such
other officer on such appeal shall be final:
Provided
that the Secretary or any other officer specified by the Board
in this behalf may entertain the appeal after the expiry of
the said period of thirty days if he is satisfied that the
building worker was prevented by sufficient cause from filing
the appeal in time.
(6) The secretary of the Board
shall cause to maintain such registers as may be
prescribed.
13.Identity cards.- (1) The Board shall
give to every beneficiary an identity card with his photograph
duly affixed thereon and with enough space for entering the
details of the building or other construction work done by
him.
(2) Every employer shall enter in the identity
card the details of the building or other construction work
done by the beneficiary and authenticate the same and return
it to be beneficiary.
(3) A beneficiary who has been
issued an identity card under this Act shall produce the same
whenever demanded by any officer of Government or the Board,
any inspector or any other authority for
inspection.
14.Cessation as a beneficiary.- (1) A
building worker who has been registered as a beneficiary under
this Act shall cease to be as such when he attains the age of
sixty years or when he is not engaged in building or other
construction work for not less than ninety days in a
year;
Provided that in computing the period of ninety
days under this sub-section, there shall be excluded any
period of absence from the building or other construction work
due to any personal injury caused to the building worker by
accident arising out of and in the course of his
employment.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), if a person had been a beneficiary for at
least three years continuously immediately before attaining
the age of sixty years, he shall be eligible to get such
benefits as may be prescribed.
Explanation.---For
computing the period of three years as a beneficiary with a
Board under this sub-section, there shall be added any period
for which a person had been a beneficiary with any other Board
immediately before his registration.
15.Register of
beneficiaries.- Every employer shall maintain a register in
such form as may be prescribed showing the details of
employment of beneficiaries employed in the building or other
construction work undertaken by him and the same may be
inspected without any prior notice by the Secretary of the
Board or any other officer duly authorised by the Board in
this behalf.
16.Contribution of building workers.- (1)
A building worker who has been registered as a beneficiary
under this Act shall, until he attains the age of sixty years,
contribute to the Fund at such rate per mensem as may be
specified by the State Government, by notification in the
Official Gazette and different rates of construction may be
specified for different classes of building
workers;
Provided that the Board may, if satisfied that
a beneficiary is unable to pay his contribution due to any
financial hardship, waive the payment of contribution for a
period not exceeding three months at a time.
(2) A
beneficiary may authorise his employer to deduct his
contribution from his monthly wages and to remit the same,
within fifteen days from such deduction, to the
Board.
17.Effect of non-payment of contribution.- When
a beneficiary has not paid his contribution under sub-section
(1) of section 16 for a continuous period of not less than one
year, he shall cease to be a beneficiary;
Provided that
if the Secretary of the Board is satisfied that the non
payment of contribution was for a reasonable ground and that
the building worker is willing to deposit the arrears, he may
allow the building worker to deposit the contribution in
arrears and on such deposit being made, the registration of
building worker shall stand restored.
CHAPTER
V
BUILDING AND OTHER CONSTRUCTION WORKERS' WELFARE
BOARDS
18.Constitution of State Welfare Boards.-
(1) Every State Government shall, with effect from such date
as it may, by notification, appoint, constitute a Board to be
known as the.....(name of the State) Building and Other
Construction Workers' Welfare Board to exercise the powers
conferred on, and perform the functions assigned to, it under
this Act.
(2) The Board shall be a body corporate by
the name aforesaid, having perpetual succession and a common
seal and shall by the said name sue and be sued.
(3)
The Board shall consist of a chairperson, a person to be
nominated by the Central Government and such number of other
members, not exceeding fifteen, as may be appointed to it by
the State Government;
Provided that the Board shall
include an equal number of members representing the State
Government, the employers and the building workers and that at
least one member of the Board shall be a woman.
(4) The
terms and conditions of appointment and the salaries and other
allowances payable to the chairperson and the other members of
the Board ,and the manner of filling of casual vacancies of
the members of the Boards, shall be such as may be
prescribed.
19.Secretary and other officers of Boards.-
(1) The Board shall appoint a Secretary and such other
officers and employees as it considers necessary for the
efficient discharge of its functions under this
Act.
(2) The secretary of the Board shall be its chief
executive officer.
(3) The terms and conditions of
appointment and the salary and allowances payable to the
Secretary and the other officers and employees of the Board
shall be such as may be prescribed.
20.Meetings of
Boards.- (1) The Board shall meet at such time and place and
observe such rules of procedure in regard to the transaction
of business at its meetings (including the quorum at such
meetings) as may be prescribed.
(2) The chairperson or,
if for any reason he is unable to attend a meeting of the
Board, any member nominated by the chairperson in this behalf
and in the absence of such nomination, any other member
elected by the members present from amongst themselves at the
meetings, shall preside at the meeting.
(3) All
questions which come up before any meeting of the Board shall
be decided by a majority of votes of the members present and
voting, and in the event of equality of votes, the
chairperson, or in his absence, the person presiding, shall
have a second or a casting vote.
21.Vacancies, etc.not
to invalidate proceedings of the Boards.- No act or
proceedings of a Board shall be invalid merely by reason
of---
(a) any vacancy in, or any defect in the
constitution of, the Board; or
(b) any defect in the
appointment of a person acting as a member of the Board;
or
(c) any irregularity in the procedure of the Board
not affecting the merits of the case.
22.Functions of
the Boards.- (1) The Board may---
(a) provide immediate
assistance to a beneficiary in case of accident;
(b)
make payment of pension to the beneficiaries who have
completed the age of sixty years;
(c) sanction loans
and advances to a beneficiary for construction of a house not
exceeding such amount and on such terms and conditions as may
be prescribed;
(d) pay such amount in connection with
premia for Group Insurance Scheme of the beneficiaries as it
may deem fit;
(e) give such financial assistance for
the education of children of the beneficiaries as may be
prescribed;
(f) meet such medical expenses for
treatment of major ailments of a beneficiary or, such
dependant, as may be prescribed;
(g) make payment of
maternity benefit to the female beneficiaries; and
(h)
make provision and improvement of such other welfare measures
and facilities as may be prescribed.
(2) The Board may
grant loan or subsidy to a local authority or an employer in
aid of any scheme approved by the State Government for the
purpose connected with the welfare of building workers in any
establishment.
(3) The Board may pay annually
grants-in-aid to a local authority or to an employer who
provides to the satisfaction of the Board welfare measures and
facilities of the standard specified by the Board for the
benefit of the building workers and the members of their
family, so, however, that the amount payable as grants-in-aid
to any local authority or employer shall not
exceed---
(a) the amount spent in providing welfare
measures and facilities as determined by the State Governments
or any person specified by it in this behalf, or
(b)
such amount as may be prescribed,
whichever is
less:
Provided that no grant-in-aid shall be payable in
respect of any such welfare measures and facilities where the
amount spent thereon determined as aforesaid is less than the
amount prescribed in this behalf.
23.Grants and loans
by the Central Government.- The Central Government may, after
due appropriation made by Parliament by law in this behalf,
make to a Board grants and loans of such sums of money as the
Government may consider necessary.
24.Building and
other Construction Workers Welfare Fund and its application.-
(1) There shall be constituted by a Board a fund to be called
in Building and Other Construction Workers' Welfare Fund and
there shall be credited thereto---
(a) any grants and
loans made to the Board by the Central Government under
section 23;
(b) all contributions made by the
beneficiaries;
(c) all sums received by the Board from
such other sources as may be decided by the Central
Government.
(2) The Fund shall be applied for
meeting---
(a) expenses of the Board in the discharge
of its functions under section 22; and
(b) salaries,
allowances and other remuneration of the members, officers and
other employees of the Board;
(c) expenses on objects
and for purposes authorised by this Act. (3) No Board
shall, in any financial year.incur expenses towards salaries,
allowances and other remuneration to its members, officers and
other employees and for meeting the other administrative
expenses exceeding five per cent.of its total expenses during
that financial year.
25.Budget.- The Board shall
prepare, in such form and at such time each financial year, as
may be prescribed, its budget for the next financial year,
showing the estimated receipts and expenditure of the Board
and forward the same to the State Government and the Central
Government.
26.Annual report.- The Board shall prepare,
in such form and at such time each financial year a may be
prescribed, its annual report, giving a full account of its
activities during the previous financial year, and submit a
copy thereof to the State Government and the Central
Government.
27.Accounts and audit.- (1) The Board shall
maintain proper accounts and other relevant records and
prepare and annual statement of accounts in such form as may
be prescribed in consultation with the Comptroller and
Auditor-General of India.
(2) The Comptroller and
Auditor-General of India or any other person appointed by him
in connection with the auditing of the accounts of the Board
under this Act shall have the same rights and privileges and
the authority in connection with such audit as the Comptroller
and Auditor-General of India has in connection with the
auditing of the Government accounts and, in particular shall
have the right to demand the production of books, accounts,
connected vouchers and other documents and papers and to
inspect any of the offices of the Board under this
Act.
(3) The accounts of the Board shall be audited by
the Comptroller and Auditor-General of India annually and any
expenditure incurred in connection with such audit shall be
payable by the Board to the Comptroller and Auditor-General of
India.
(4) The Board shall furnish to the State
Government before such date as may be prescribed its audited
copy of accounts together with the auditor's
report.
(5) The State Government shall cause the annual
report and auditor's report to be laid, as soon as may be
after they are received, before the State
Legislature.
CHAPTER VI HOURS OF WORK, WELFARE
MEASURES AND OTHER CONDITIONS OF SERVICE
BUILDING WORKERS
28.Fixing hours for normal
working day, etc.- (1) The appropriate Government may, by
rules,----
(a) fix the number of hours of work which
shall constitute a normal working day for a building worker,
inclusive of one or more specified intervals;
(b)
provided for a day of rest in every period of seven days which
shall be allowed to all building workers and for the payment
of remuneration in respect of such days of rest;
(c)
provide for payment of work on a day of rest at a rate not
less than the overtime rate specified in section
29.
(2) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall, in
relation to the following classes of building workers, apply
only to such extent, an subject to such conditions, as may be
prescribed, namely:---
(a) persons engaged on urgent
work, or in any emergency which could not have been foreseen
or prevented;
(b) persons engaged in a work in the
nature of preparatory or complementary work which must
necessarily be carried out outside the normal hours of work
laid down in the rules:
(c) persons engaged in any work
which for technical reasons has to be completed before the day
is over;
(d) persons engaged in a work which could not
be carried on except at times dependant on the irregular
action of natural forces.
29.Wages for overtime work.-
(1) Where any building worker is required to work on any day
in excess of the number of hours constituting a normal working
day, he shall be entitled to wages at the rate of twice his
ordinary rate of wages.
(2) For the purposes of this
section, "ordinary rates of wages" means the basic wages plus
such allowances as the worker is for the time being entitled
to but does not include any bonus.
30.Maintenance of
registers and records.- (1) Every employer shall maintain such
registers and records giving such particulars of building
workers employed by him, the work performed by them, the
number of hours of work which shall constitute a normal
working day for them, a day of rest in every period of seven
days which shall be allowed to them, the wages paid to them,
the receipts given by them and such other particulars in such
form as may be prescribed.
(2) Every employer shall
keep exhibited, in such manner as may be prescribed, in the
place where such workers may be employed, notices in the
prescribed form containing the prescribed
particulars.
(3) The appropriate Government may, by
rules, provide for the issue of wage books of wage slips to
building workers employed in an establishment and prescribe
the manner in which entries shall be made and authenticated in
such wages books or wage slips by the employer or his
agent.
31.Prohibition of employment of certain persons
in certain building or other construction work.- No person
about whom the employer knows or has reason to believe that he
is a deaf or he has a defective vision or he has a tendency to
giddiness shall be required or allowed to work in any such
operation of building or other construction work which is
likely to involve a risk of any accident either to the
building worker himself or to any other
person.
32.Drinking water.- (1) The employer shall make
in every place where building or other construction work is in
progress, effective arrangements to provide and maintain at
suitable points conveniently situated for all persons employed
therein, a sufficient supply of wholesome drinking
water.
(2) All such points shall be legibly marked
"Drinking Water" in a language under-stood by a majority of
the persons employed in such place and no such point shall be
situated within six metres of any washing place, urinal or
latrine.
33.Latrines and urinals.- In every place where
building or other construction work is carried on, the
employer shall provide sufficient latrine and urinal
accommodation of such types as may be prescribed and they
shall be so conveniently situated as may be accessible to the
building workers at all times while they are in such
place;
Provided that it shall not be necessary to
provide separate urinals in any place where less than fifty
persons are employed or where the latrines are connected to a
water-borne sewage system.
34.Accommodation.- (1) The
employer shall provide, free of charges and within the work
site or as near to it as may be possible, temporary living
accommodation to all building workers employed by him for such
period as the building or other construction work is in
progress.
(2) The temporary accommodation provided
under sub-section (1) shall have separate cooking place,
bathing, washing and lavatory facilities.
(3) As soon
as may be, after the building or other construction work is
over, the employer shall, at his own cost, cause removal or
demolition of the temporary structures erected by him for the
purpose of providing living accommodation, cooking place or
other facilities to the building workers as required under
sub-section (1) and restore the ground in good level and clean
condition.
(4) In case an employer is given any land by
a Municipal Board or any other local authority for the local
authority for the purposes of providing temporary
accommodation for the building workers under this section, he
shall, as soon as may be after the construction work is over,
return the possession of such land in the same condition in
which he received the same.
35.(1) In every place
wherein, more than fifty female building workers are
ordinarily employed, there shall be provided and maintained a
suitable room or rooms for the use of children under the age
of six years of such female workers.
(2) Such room
shall----
(a) provide adequate
accommodation:
(b) be adequately lighted and
ventilated;
(c) be maintained in a clean and sanitary
condition;
(d) be under the charge of woman trained in
the care of children and infants.
36.First-aid.- Every
employer shall provide in all the places where building or
other construction work is carried on such first-aid
facilities as may be prescribed.
37.Canteens, etc.- The
appropriate Government may, by rules, require the
employer------
(a) to provide and maintain in every
place wherein not less than two hundred and fifty building
workers are ordinarily employed , a canteen for the use of the
workers;
(b) to provide such other welfare measures for
the benefit of building workers as may be
prescribed.
CHAPTER VII
SAFETY AND HEALTH
MEASURE
38.Safety Committee and safety officers.-
(1) The every establishment wherein five hundred or more
building workers are ordinarily employed, the employer shall
constitute a Safety Committee consisting of such number of
representatives of the employer and the building workers as
may be prescribed by the State Government.
Provided
that the number of persons representing the workers, shall, in
no case, be less than the persons representing the
employer.
(2) In every establishment referred to in
sub-section (1), the employer shall also appoint a safety
officer who shall possess such qualifications and perform such
duties as may be prescribed.
39.Notice of certain
accidents.- (1) Where in any establishment an accident occurs
which causes death or which causes any bodily injury by reason
of which the person injured is prevented from working for a
period of forty-eight hours of more immediately following the
accident, or which is of such a nature as may be prescribed ,
the employer shall give notice thereof to such authority, in
such form and within such time as may be
prescribed.
(2) On receipt of a notice under
sub-section (1) the authority referred to in that sub-section
may make such investigation or inquiry as it considers
necessary.
(3) Where a notice given under sub-section
(1) relates to an accident causing death of five or more
persons, the authority shall make an inquiry into such
accident within one month of the receipt of the
notice.
40.Power of appropriate Government to make
rules for the safety and health of building workers.- (1) The
appropriate Government may, by notification, make rules
regarding the measures to be taken for the safety and health
of building workers in the course of their employment and the
equipment and appliances necessary to be provided to them for
ensuring their safety, health and protection, during such
employment.
(2) In particular, and without prejudice to
the generality of the foregoing power, such rules may provide
for all or any of the following matter, namely:---
(a)
the safe means of access to, and the safety of, any working
place, including the provision of suitable and sufficient
scaffolding at various stages when work cannot be safety from
the ground of from any part of building of from a ladder of
such other means of support;
(b) the precautions to be
taken in connection with the demolition of the whole or any
substantial part of a building or other structure under the
supervision of a competent person and the avoidance of danger
from collapse of any building or other structure while
removing any part of the framed building or other structure by
shorting or otherwise;
(c) the handing or use of
explosive under the control of competent persons so that there
is no exposure to the risk of injury from explosion or from
flying material;
(d) the erection, installation, use
and maintenance of transporting equipment, such as
locomotives, trucks, wagons and other vehicles and trailers
and appointment of competent persons to drive of operate such
equipment;
(e) the erection, installation, use and
maintenance of hoists, lifting appliances and lifting gear
including periodical testing and examination and heat
treatment, where necessary, precautions to be taken while
raising or lowering loads, restrictions on carriage of persons
and appointment of competent persons on hoists or other
lifting appliances;
(f) the adequate and suitable
lighting of every workplace and approach thereto, of every
place where raising or lowering operations with the use of
hoists, lifting appliances or lifting gears are in progress
and of all openings dangerous to building workers
employed; (g) the precautions to be taken to prevent
inhalation of dust, fumes, gases or vapours during any
grinding, cleaning, spraying or manipulation of any material
and steps to be taken to secure and maintain adequate
ventilation of every working place or confined
space;
(h) the measures to be taken during stacking or
unstacking, stowing or unstowing of materials or goods or
handling in connection therewith;
(i) the safeguarding
of machinery including the fencing of every fly-wheel and
every moving part of a prime mover and every part of
transmission or other machinery, unless it is in such a
position or of such construction as to be safe to every worker
working on any of the operations and as if is were securely
fenced;
(j) the safe handling and use of plant,
including tools and equipment operated by compressed
air;
(k) the precautions to be taken in case of
fire;
(l) the limits of weight to be lifted or moved by
workers;
(m) the safe transport of workers to or from
any workplace by water and provision of means for rescue from
drowning;
(n) the steps to be taken to prevent danger
to workers from live electric wires or apparatus including
electrical machinery an tools and from overhead
wires;
(o) the keeping of safety nets, safety sheets
and safety belts where the special nature or the circumstances
of work render them necessary for the safety of the
workers;
(p) the standards to be complied with regard
to scaffolding, ladders and stairs, lifting appliances, ropes,
chains and accessories, earth moving equipments and floating
operational equipments;
(q) the precautions to be taken
with regard to pile driving, concrete work, work with hot
asphalt, tar or other similar things, insulation work,
demolition operations, excavation, underground construction
and handing materials;
(r) the safety policy, that is
to say, a policy relating to steps to be taken to ensure the
safety and health of the building workers, the administrative
arrangements therefor and the matters connected therewith, to
be framed by the employers and contractors for the operations
to be carried on in a building or other construction
work;
(s) the information to be furnished to the Bureau
of Indian Standards established under the Bureau of Indian
Standards Act, 1986, regarding the use of any article or
process covered under that Act in a building or other
construction work;
(t) the provision and maintenance of
medical facilities for building workers;
(u) any other
matter concerning the safety and health of workers working in
any of the operations being carried on in a building or other
construction work.
41.Framing of model rules for safety
measures.- The Central Government may, after considering the
recommendation of the expert committee constituted under
section 5, frame model rules in respect of all or any of the
matters specified in section 40 and where any such rules have
been framed in respect of any such matter, the appropriate
Government shall, while making any rules in respect of that
matter under section 40, so far as is practicable, conform to
such model rules.
CHAPTER VIII
INSPECTING
STAFF
42.Appointment of Director-General, Chief
Inspector and Inspectors.- (1) The Central Government may, by
notification, appoint a Gazetted Officer of the Government to
be the Director-General of Inspection who shall be responsible
for laying down the standards of inspection and shall also
exercise the powers of an Inspector throughout India in
relation to all the establishments for which the Central
Government is the appropriate Government.
(2) The State
Government may, by notification, appoint a Gazetted Officer of
that Government to be the Chief Inspector of Inspection of
Building and Construction who shall be responsible for
effectively carrying out the provisions of this Act in the
State and shall also exercise the powers of an Inspector under
this Act throughout the State in relation to establishments
for which the State Government is the appropriate
Government.
(3) The appropriate Government may, by
notification, appoint such number of its officers as it thinks
fit to be Inspectors for the purposes of this Act and may
assign to them such local limits as it may think
fit.
(4) Every Inspector appointed under this section
shall be subject to the control of the Director-General or the
Chief Inspector, as the case may be, and shall exercise his
powers and perform his functions under this Act subject to
general control and supervision of the Director-General or the
Chief Inspector.
(5) The Director-General, the Chief
Inspector and every Inspector shall be deemed to be public
servants within the meaning of section 21 of the Indian Penal
Code.
43.Powers of Inspectors.- (1) Subject to any
rules made in this behalf, an Inspector may, within the local
limits for which he is appointed,----
(a) enter, at all
reasonable hours, with such assistants (if any) being persons
in the service of the Government or any local or other public
authority as he thinks fit, any premises or place where
building or other construction work is carried on , for the
purpose of examining any register or record or notices
required to be kept or exhibited by or under this Act, and
require the production thereof for inspection;
(b)
examine any person whom he finds in any such premises or place
and who, he has reasonable cause to believe, is a building
worker employed therein;
(c) require any person giving
out building or other construction work to any building
worker, to give any information, which is in his power to give
with respect to the names and addresses of the persons to, for
and whom the building or other construction work in given out
or received, and with respect to the payments to be made for
the building or other construction work;
(d) seize or
take copies of such register, record of wage or notices or
portions thereof as he may consider relevant in respect of an
offence under this Act which he has reason to believe has been
committed by the employer; and
(e) exercise such other
powers as may be prescribed.
(2) For the purposes of
this section, the Director-General or the Chief Inspector, as
the case may be, may employ experts of agencies having such
qualifications and experience and on such terms and conditions
as may be prescribed.
(3) Any person required to
produce any document or to give any information required by an
Inspector under sub-section (1) shall be deemed to be legally
bound to do so within the meaning of section 175 and section
176 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).
(4) The
provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of
1974), shall, so far as may be, apply to such search or
seizure under sub-section (1) as they apply to any search or
seizure made under the authority of a warrant issued under
section 94 of the said Code.
CHAPTER
IX
SPECIAL PROVISIONS
44.Responsibility of
employer.- An employer shall be responsible for providing
constant and adequate supervision of any building or other
construction work in his establishment as to ensure compliance
with the provisions of this Act relating to safety and for
taking all practical steps necessary to prevent
accidents.
45.Responsibility for payment of wages and
compensation.- (1) An employer shall be responsible for
payment of wages to each building worker employed by him and
such wages shall be paid on or before such date as may be
prescribed.
(2) In case the contractor fails to make
payment of compensation in respect of a building worker
employed by him, where he is liable to make such payment when
due, or makes short payment thereof, then, in the case of
death or disablement of the building worker, the employer
shall be liable to make payment of that compensation in full
or the unpaid balance due in accordance with the provisions of
the Workmen's Compensation Act, 1923 (8 of 1923), and recover
the amount so paid from the contractor either by deduction
from any amount payable to the contractor under any contract
or as a debt payable by the contractor.
46.(1) An
employer shall, at least thirty days before the commencement
of any building or other construction work, send or cause to
be sent to the Inspector having jurisdiction in the area where
the proposed building or other construction work is to be
executed , a written notice containing-
(a) the name
and situation of the place where the building or other
construction work is proposed to be carried on;
(b) the
name and address of the person who is undertaking the building
or other construction work;
(c) the address to which
communications relating to the building or other construction
work may be sent;
(d) the nature of the work involved
and the facilities, including any plant and machinery,
provided;
(e) the arrangements for the storage of
explosives, if any, to be used in the building or other
construction work;
(f) the number of workers likely to
be employed during the various stages of building or other
construction work;
(g) the name and designation of the
person who will be in overall charge of the building or other
construction work at the site;
(h) the approximate
duration of the work; (i) such other matters as may be
prescribed.
(2) Where any change occurs in any of the
particulars furnished under sub-section (1), the employer
shall intimate the change to the Inspector within two days of
such change.
(3) Nothing contained in sub-section (1)
shall apply in case of such class of building or other
construction work as the appropriate Government may by
notification specify to be emergent works.
CHAPTER
X
PENALTIES AND PROCEDURE
47.Penalty for
contravention of provisions regarding safety measures.- (1)
Whoever contravenes the provisions of any rules made under
section 40 shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term
which may extend to three months, or with fine which may
extend to two thousand rupees, or with both, and in the case
of a continuing contravention, with an additional fine which
may extend to one hundred rupees for every day during which
such contravention continues after conviction for the first
such contravention.
(2) If any person who has been
convicted of any offence punishable under sub-section (1) is
again guilty of an offence involving a contravention or
failure of compliance of the same provision, he shall be
punishable on a subsequent conviction with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to six months or with fine which shall
not be less than five hundred rupees but which may extend to
two thousand rupees or with both:
Provided that for the
purposes of this Sub-section, no cognizance shall be taken of
any conviction made more than two years before the commission
of the offence for which the person is subsequently being
convicted:
Provided further that the authority imposing
the penalty, if it is satisfied that there are exceptional
circumstances warranting such a course may, after recording
its reasons ins writing, impose a fine of less than five
hundred rupees.
48.Penalty for failure to give notice
of the commencement of the building or other construction
work.- Where an employer fails to give notice of the
commencement of the building or other construction work under
section 46, he shall be punishable with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to three months, or with fine which may
extend to two thousand rupees, or with both.
49.Penalty
for obstructions.- (1) Whoever obstructs an Inspector in the
discharge of his duties under this Act or refuses or wilfully
neglects to afford the Inspector any reasonable facility for
making any inspection, examination, inquiry to investigation
authorised by or under this Act in relation to an
establishment shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term
which may extend to three months, or with fine which may
extend to one thousand rupees, or with both. (2) Whoever
wilfully refuses to produce on the demand of an Inspector any
register or other document kept in pursuance of this Act or
prevents or attempts to prevent or does anything which he has
reason to believe is likely to prevent any person from
appearing before, or being examined by, an Inspector acting in
pursuance of his duties under this Act shall be punishable
with imprisonment for a term which may extend to three months,
or with fine which may extend to one thousand rupees, or with
both.
50.Penalty for other offences.- (1) Whoever
contravenes and other provision of this Act or any rules made
thereunder or who fails to comply with any provision of this
Act or any rules made thereunder shall, where no express
penalty is elsewhere provided for such contravention or
failure, be punishable with fine which may extend to one
thousand rupees for every such contravention or failure, as
the case may be, and in the case of a continuing contravention
or failure, as the case may be, with an additional fine which
may extend to one hundred rupees for every day during which
such contravention or failure continues after the conviction
for the first such contravention or failure.
(2) A
penalty under sub-section (1) may be imposed-----
(a)
by the Director-General where the contravention or failure
relates to a matter to which the appropriate Government is the
Central Government; and
(b) by the Chief Inspector
where the contravention or failure relates to a matter to
which the appropriate Government is the State
Government.
(3) No penalty shall be imposed unless the
person concerned is given a notice in writing----
(a)
informing him of the grounds on which it is proposed to impose
a penalty; and
(b) giving him a reasonable opportunity
of making a representation in writing within such reasonable
time as may be specified in the notice against the imposition
of penalty mentioned therein, and, if he so desires, of being
heard in the matter.
(4) Without prejudice to any other
provision contained in this Act, the Director-General and the
Chief Inspector shall have all the powers of a civil court
under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, while exercising any
powers under this section, in respect of the following
matters, namely:---
(a) summoning and enforcing the
attendance of witnesses:
(b) requiring the discovery
and production of any document;
(c) requisitioning any
public record or copy thereof from any court or
office;
(d) receiving evidence on affidavits;
and
(e) issuing commissions for the examination of
witnesses or documents.
(5) Nothing contained in this
section shall be construed to prevent the person concerned
from being prosecuted under any other provision of this Act or
any other law for any offence made punishable by this Act or
by that other law, as the case may be, or for being liable
under this Act or any such law to any other or higher penalty
or punishment than is provided for such offence by this
section:
Provided that no person shall be punished
twice for the same offence.
51.Appeal.- Any person
aggrieved by the imposition of any penalty under section 50
may prefer an appeal----
(a) where the penalty has been
imposed by the Director-General, to the Central
Government;
(b) where the penalty has been imposed by
the Chief Inspector, to the State Government,
within a
period of three months from the date of communication to such
person of the imposition of such penalty:
Provided that
the Central Government or the State Government, as the case
may be, may, if it is satisfied that the appellant was
prevented by sufficient cause from preferring an appeal within
the aforesaid period of three months, allow such appeal to be
preferred within a further period of three months.
(2)
The appellant authority may, after giving the appellant an
opportunity of being heard, if he so desires, and after making
such further inquiry, if any, it may consider necessary, pass
such order as it thinks fit confirming, modifying or reversing
the order appealed against or may send back the case with such
directions as it may think fit for a fresh
decision.
52.Recovery of penalty.- Where any penalty
imposed on any person under section 50 is not
paid.----
(i) the Director-General or, as the case may
be, the Chief Inspector may deduct the amount so payable from
any money owing to such person which may be under his control;
or
(ii) the Director-General or, as the case may be,
the Chief Inspector may recover the amount so payable by
detaining or selling the goods belonging to such person which
are under his control; or
(iii) if the amount cannot be
recovered from such person in the manner provided in clause
(I) or clause (ii), the Director-General or, as the case may
be, the Chief Inspector may prepare a certificate signed by
him specifying the amount due from such person and send it to
the Collector of the district in which such person owns any
property or resides or carries on his business and the said
Collector, on receipt of such certificate shall proceed to
recover from such person the amount specified thereunder as if
it were an arrear of land revenue.
53.Offences by
companies.- (1) Where an offence under this Act has been
committed by a company ,every person who, at the time the
offence was committed, was in charge of, and was responsible
to, the company for the conduct of the business of the
company, as well as the company, shall be deemed to be guilty
of the offences and shall be liable to be proceeded against
and punished accordingly;
Provided that nothing
contained in this sub-section shall render any such person
liable to any punishment, if he proves that the offence was
committed without his knowledge or that he had exercised all
due diligence to prevent the commission of such
offence.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), where any offence under this Act has been
committed by a company and it is proved that the offence has
been committed with the consent or connivance of, or is
attributable to any neglect on the part of any director,
manager, secretary or other officer of the company, such
director, manager, secretary or other officer shall be deemed
to be guilty of that offence and shall be liable to be
proceeded against and punished
accordingly.
Explanation.---For the purposes of this
section,----
(a) "company" means any body corporate and
includes a firm or other association of individuals;
and
(b) "director" in relation to a firm, means a
partner in the firm.
54.Cognizance of offences.- (1) No
court shall take cognizance of any offence punishable under
this Act except on a complaint----
(a) made by, or with
the previous sanction in writing of, the Director-General or
the Chief Inspector; or
(b) made by an office-bearer of
a voluntary organisation registered under the Societies
Registration Act, 1860; or
(c) made by an office-bearer
of any concerned trade union registered under the Trade Unions
Act, 1926.
(2) No court inferior to that of a
Metropolitan Magistrate or a Judicial Magistrate of the first
class shall try any offence punishable under this
Act.
55.Limitation of prosecutions.- No court shall
take cognizance of an offence punishable under this Act unless
the complaint thereof is made within three months from the
date on which the alleged commission of the offence came to
the knowledge of the Director-General, the Chief Inspector, an
office-bearer of a voluntary organisation, or, as the case may
be, an office-bearer of any concerned trade
union.
CHAPTER
XI
MISCELLANEOUS
56.Delegation of powers.- A
Board may, by general or special order, delegate to the
Chairperson or any other member or to the Secretary or any
other officer or employee of the Board, subject to such
conditions and limitations, if any, as may be specified in the
order, such of its powers and duties under this Act as it may
deem necessary.
57.Returns.- Every Board shall furnish
from time to time to the General Government and to the State
Government such returns as they may
require.
58.Application of Act 8 of 1923 to building
workers.- The Provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Act,
1923, shall so far as may be, apply to building workers as if
the employment to which this Act applies had been included in
the Second Schedule to that Act.
59.Protection of
action taken in good faith.- (1) No suit, prosecution or other
legal proceeding shall lie against any person for anything
which is in good faith done or intended to be done in
pursuance of this Act or any rule or order made
thereunder.
(2) No prosecution or other legal
proceeding shall lie against the Government, any Board or
Committees constituted under this Act or any member of such
Board or any officer or employee of the Government or the
Board or any other person authorised by the Government or any
Board or Committee, for any damage caused or likely to be
caused by anything which is in good faith done or intended to
be done in pursuance of this Act or any rule or order made or
issued thereunder.
60.Power of Central Government to
give directions.- The Central Government may give directions
to the Government of any State or to a Board as to the
carrying into execution in that State of any of the provisions
of this Act.
61.Power to remove difficulties.- (1) If
any difficulty arises in giving effect to the provisions of
this Act, the Central Government may, by order published in
the Official Gazette, make such provisions not inconsistent
with the provisions of this Act, as appears to it to be
necessary or expedient for removing the
difficulty;
Provided that no such order shall be made
after the expiry of two years from the date of commencement of
this Act.
(2) Every order made under this section
shall, as soon as may be after it is made, bee laid before
each House of Parliament.
62.Power to make rules.- (1)
The appropriate Government may, after consultation with the
expert committee, by notification, make rules for carrying out
the provisions of this Act.
(2) In particular and
without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power,
such rules may provided for all or any of the following
matters, namely:---
(a) the number of persons to be
appointed as members representing various interests on the
Central Advisory Committee and the State Advisory Committees,
the term of their office and other conditions of service, the
procedure to be followed in the discharge of their functions
and the manner of filling vacancies under sub-section (3) of
section 3 or, as the case may be, under sub-section (3) of
section 4;
(b) the fees and allowances that may be paid
to the members of the expert committee for attending its
meetings under sub-section (2) of section 5;
(c) the
form of application for the registration of an establishment,
the levy of fees therefor and the particulars it may contain
under sub-section (2) of section 7;
(d) the form of
certificate of registration, the time within which and the
conditions subject to which such certificate may be issued
under sub-section (3) of section 7;
(e) the form in
which the change in ownership or management or other
particulars shall be intimated to the registering officer
under sub-section (4) of section 7;
(f) the form in
which an application for registration as a beneficiary shall
be made under sub-section (2) of section 12;
(g) the
document and the fee which shall accompany the application
under sub-section (3) of section 12;
(h) the registers
which the Secretary of the Board shall cause to be maintained
under sub-section (6) of section 12;
(i) the benefits
which may be given under sub-section (2) of section
14;
(j) the form in which register of beneficiaries
shall be maintained under section 15;
(k) the terms and
conditions of appointment, the salaries and other allowances
payable to, and the manner of filling of casual vacancies of,
the Chairperson and other members of the Board under
sub-section (4) of section 18;
(l) the terms and
conditions of service and the salaries and allowances payable
to the Secretary and the other officers and employees of the
Board under sub-section (3) of section 19;
(m) the time
and place of the meeting of the Board and the rules of
procedure to be followed at such meeting under sub-section (1)
of section 20 including quorum necessary for the transaction
of business;
(n) the amount payable as house building
loans or advances, the terms and conditions of such payment
under clause (c), educational assistance under clause (e),
medical expenses payable and the persons who shall be the
dependent of the beneficiaries under clause (f), and the other
welfare measures for which provision may be made under clause
(h), of sub-section (1) of section 22;
(o) the limits
of grants-in-aid payable to the local authorities and
employers under clause (b) of sub-section (3) of section
22;
(p) the form in which and the time within which the
budget of the Board shall be prepared and forwarded to
Government under section 25;
(r) the form of annual
statement of accounts under sub-section (1), and the date
before which the audited copy of the accounts together with
the auditor's report shall be furnished under sub-section (4),
of section 27;
(s) the matters required to be provided
under sub-section (1) of section 28 and the extent up to
which, and the conditions subject to which, the provisions of
that sub-section shall apply to the building workers under
sub-section (2) of that section;
(t) the registers and
records that shall be maintained by the employer and the form
in which such registers and records shall be maintained and
the particulars to be included therein under sub-section (1)
of section 30;
(u) the form and manner in which a
notice shall be exhibited and the particulars it may contain
under sub-section (2) of section 30;
(v) the issue of
wage books or wage slips to building workers and the manner in
which entries are to be made and authenticated in wage books
or wage slips under sub-section (3) of section 30;
(w)
the types of latrines and urinals required to be provided
under section 33;
(x) the first-aid facilities which
are to be provided under section 36;
(y) the canteen
facilities which are to be provided under clause (a) of
section 37;
(z) the welfare measures which are to be
provided under clause (b) of section 37;
(za) the
number of representatives of the employer and the building
workers under sub-section (1) of section 38 and the
qualifications of safety officers and the duties to be
performed by them under sub-section (2) of that
section;
(zb) the form of a notice of accident, other
matters to be provided in this behalf and the time within
which such notice shall be given under sub-section (1) of
section 39;
(zc) the rules to be made for the safety
and health of building workers under section 40;
(zd)
the powers that may be exercised by an Inspector under clause
(e) of sub-section (1) of section 43 and the qualifications
and experience which the experts or agencies employed under
sub-section (2) of that section shall possess and the terms
and conditions on which such experts or agencies may be
employed;
(ze) the date on or before which wages shall
be paid to a building worker under section 45;
(zf) the
matters which are required to be prescribed under clause (I)
of sub-section (1) of section 46;
(zg) any other matter
which is required to be, or may be, prescribed.
(3)
Every rule made by the Central Government under this Act shall
be laid, as soon as may be after it is made, before each House
of Parliament, while it is in session for a total period of
thirty days which may be comprised in one session or to two or
more successive sessions, and if, before the expiry of the
session immediately following the session or the successive
sessions aforesaid, both Houses agree in making any
modification in the rule or both Houses agree that the rule
should not be made, the rule shall thereafter have effect only
in such modified form or be of no effect, as the case may be;
so, however, that any such modification or annulment shall be
without prejudice to the validity of anything previously done
under that rule.
(4) Every rule made by the State
Government under this Act shall be laid, as soon as may be
after it is made, before each House of the State Legislature
where it consists of two Houses, or, where such Legislature
consists of one House, before that House.
63.Saving of
certain laws.- Nothing contained in this Act shall affect the
operation of any corresponding law in a State providing
welfare schemes which are more beneficial to the building and
other construction workers than those provided for them by or
under this Act.
64.Repeal and saving.- (1) The Building
and Other Construction Workers (Regulation of Employment and
Conditions of Service) Third Ordinance, 1996 (Ord.25 of 1996),
is hereby repealed.
(2) Notwithstanding such repeal,
anything done or any action taken under the said Ordinance
shall be deemed to have been done or taken under the
corresponding provisions of this
Act.
K.L.MOHANPURIA, Secy.to the Govt.of India
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