[ REPUBLIC ACT NO. 679, April 15, 1952 ]
AN ACT TO REGULATE THE EMPLOYMENT OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN, TO PROVIDE PENALTIES FOR VIOLATION HEREOF, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Philippines in Congress assembled:
SECTION 1. Employment of children below fourteen years of age.-
SEC. 4. Medical examination of children for fitness for employment.-
SEC. 7. Employment of women.-
SEC. 14. Repeal of prior inconsistent laws.-Act Numbered Thirty hundred and seventy-one, entitled "An Act to regulate the employment of women and children in shops, factories, industrial, agricultural, and mercantile establishments, and other places of labor in the Philippine Islands; to provide penalties for violations hereof, and for other purposes," and such other acts as are inconsistent herewith, are hereby repealed.
SEC. 15. Effectivity.-This Act shall take effect on its approval.
Approved, April 15, 1952.
SECTION 1. Employment of children below fourteen years of age.-
SEC. 2. Employment of children below sixteen years of age.-
SEC. 3. Employment of children below eighteen years of age.-
For the purposes of paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of this section, the Secretary of Labor shall from time to time issue orders specifying the occupations which he determines would involve serious danger to the life or health of the employees and shall cause such orders to be published in newspapers of general circulation or by such other means as he deems reasonably calculated to give to interested persons general notice of such issuance. Any such order shall take effect thirty days after entry thereof.
No woman below eighteen years of age shall be employed or permitted or suffered to work in any bar, night club, or dance hall. No child below 18 years of age shall be employed or permitted or suffered to work in any pharmacy for the preparation of drugs. No person below eighteen years of age shall be employed or permitted or suffered to work in any shop, factory, industrial or commercial establishment or other place of labor- where the work is done in connection with the preparation or involves contamination with any noxious, poisonous, infectious or explosive substances; or where the work, not otherwise specified in this Act, involves serious danger to the life or health of the employee, as the Secretary of Labor may determine after consultation with representatives of employers and employees or organizations thereof. 
SEC. 4. Medical examination of children for fitness for employment.-
SEC. 5. Hours of work of children; night work.-
SEC. 6. Written consent of parent.-Other provisions of this Act notwithstanding, no person below eighteen years shall be employed or permitted or suffered to work in any shop, factory, commercial or industrial establishment, or other place of work or employment without written consent of his parent, guardian or person having custody over him.
SEC. 7. Employment of women.-
SEC. 8. Maternity protection.-
An employer may be exempted from the requirement of paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of this section-
SEC. 9. Facilities for women and children.-
- In any shop, factory, commercial, industrial, or agricultural establishment or other place of labor, the employer shall grant to any woman employed by him who may be pregnant vacation with pay for six weeks prior to the expected date of delivery and for another eight weeks after normal delivery or miscarriage at the rate of not less than sixty per cent of her regular or average weekly wages. The employer shall have the right to require any woman applying for vacation leave with pay under this section to produce a medical certificate stating that delivery will probably take place within six weeks. The vacation shall be extended without pay on account of illness medically certified to arise out of the pregnancy or delivery or miscarriage rendering the woman unfit for work. Prolonged abscence on account of illness incident to pregnancy or delivery or miscarriage shall not be a valid ground for discharge.
- It shall be the duty of any employer to allow any Woman employed by him who is nursing a child at least one-half hour twice a 'day during her working hours to nurse her child.
- It shall be the duty of every employer having at least fifteen married women in his employ to establish an adequate nursery near the place of work where they may leave their children, said nursery to be under the supervision of either a registered nurse or a qualified midwife.
SEC. 10. Special work permits; rules and regulations.-
The Secretary of Labor may exempt from the requirement of paragraph (2) of this subsection small shops which, on account of their small capital, cannot comply therewith.
SEC. 11. Enforcement of Act.-
- The Secretary of Labor or his duly authorized representative shall have the power to grant a special permit for the employment of any child whose employment is otherwise prohibited in this Act, whenever in his judgment the economic necessity of the family to which such child belongs requires his assistance for increasing the family income. Such permit shall be issued under such conditions as will not prejudice the compulsory school attendance of any child under the rules and regulations prescribed by the Secretary of Education under section 1 of this Act and as may be necessary for the protection of such child.
- The Secretary of Labor shall have power, after consultation with representatives of employers and employees or organizations thereof, to make, amend, or rescind such rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of this Act. Such rules and regulations, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, may define terms used in this Act and may include terms and conditions to prevent the circumvention or evasion of the provisions of this Act. Such rules and regulations shall take effect thirty days after publication in newspapers of general circulation and by such other means as the Secretary of Labor deems reasonably calculated to give the public general notice of its issuance.
SEC. 12. Violations and penalties.-
- The Director of Labor shall enforce this Act and the rules and regulations promulgated by the Secretary of Labor hereunder.
- Every employer employing women and children shall keep a printed abstract of this Act conspicuously posted in or about the premises wherein they are employed. Every employer shall keep a list of the women and children employed by him and shall furnish the Director of Labor with copy of such list and shall also keep on file the birth certificates educational certificates, medical certificates and special work permits pertaining to such children.
- The Director of Labor or his authorized representative shall have the power to enter any place of employment, during office hours where women and children are employed, to require the production of such list, birth certificates, educational certificates, medical certificates, special work permits and other pertinent books and records, to question any employee therein and make such investigation of any fact, matter or condition as may be necessary to apprehend violations of this Act or as will aid in the proper enforcement of this Act.
SEC. 13. Separability.-If any provision of this Act or the application thereof to any person or circumstance shall be held invalid, the remainder of the Act or the application of such provision to persons or circumstances other than those as to which it is held invalid, shall not be affected thereby.
- It shall be unlawful for any employer to discharge any woman employed by him who may be pregnant for the purpose of preventing such woman from enjoying the benefits of section 7 of this Act or to discharge such woman while on leave M on account of her pregnancy or confinement.
- It shall be unlawful for any employer to discharge any woman or child employed by him for having filed a complaint under this Act or to discharge such woman and child or any other employee who has given testimony or is about to give testimony under this Act.
- Any violation of any provision of this Act shall be punished by a fine of not less than one hundred pesos nor more than five thousand pesos, or by imprisonment for not less than thirty days nor more than one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment, in the discretion of the court.
If the violation is committed by a firm, association or corporation, the manager or in his default, the person acting as such, shall be liable.
SEC. 14. Repeal of prior inconsistent laws.-Act Numbered Thirty hundred and seventy-one, entitled "An Act to regulate the employment of women and children in shops, factories, industrial, agricultural, and mercantile establishments, and other places of labor in the Philippine Islands; to provide penalties for violations hereof, and for other purposes," and such other acts as are inconsistent herewith, are hereby repealed.
SEC. 15. Effectivity.-This Act shall take effect on its approval.
Approved, April 15, 1952.