SINGAPORE - The Government has accepted recommendations that will see higher monthly wages for security officers while limiting the number of overtime hours they can clock.
Over the next three years, security officers will see their basic pay go up by around $300. They will also receive an annual increment of at least 3 per cent in the three years after that.
All security officers will be allowed to put in a maximum of only 72 overtime (OT) hours a month. The current practice - in which security companies apply for exemptions if they want their employees to go past this limit - will be discontinued from 2021 onwards.
The changes, which follow a review of the progressive wage model in the security industry, will benefit more than 34,000 Singaporean and permanent residents working as security officers here.
The progressive wage model is a wage ladder that aims to raise the salaries of low-wage workers through skills upgrading and improvements in productivity.
The model is compulsory for companies licensed in the cleaning, security and landscape sectors.
It specifies a starting wage of at least $1,100 a month for security officers, with salaries going up to $1,300, and more for those who are higher-skilled.
Under the progressive wage model, security supervisors are to be paid a starting wage of $1,500.
Wages for security officers have risen since 2014, when the model was first launched for the security sector, said STC. It was made mandatory for the security sector in September 2016.
Between 2014 and 2016, the median basic wages of full-time security guards grew by 23 per cent per annum.
In June 2016, the median basic wage of full-time security officers was $1,300.
With the changes, security officers will see a total increase of $300 to basic monthly wages under the progressive wage model by 2021, and a total increase of $285 for those in senior ranks over the same period.
Wages should rise by $75 a month in 2019 and the same amount in 2020, followed by a $150 raise in monthly wages in 2021. For those in senior ranks, this will start with a $60 increase in monthly wages for the first two years followed by a $165 raise in monthly wages.
Higher increments are recommended in 2021 as that is the year OT exemptions will be removed. The higher increments are to ensure that security officers' gross wages will not be "adversely affected due to a reduction in overtime hours", said the STC.
While employees are only allowed to clock up to 72 OT hours a month under the Employment Act, employers that require their employees to work past this limit have to apply to the Ministry of Manpower for an exemption.
The security sector has the highest average weekly overtime per worker, according to a 2014 report by the STC. Security officers clock as much as 95 hours of overtime each month.
Currently, overtime exemption is not granted for work that is undertaken in certain conditions, such as work that requires continuous and manual operation of machinery, or work at elevated heights.
The STC also recommended an annual increase of at least 3 per cent to wages from 2022 to 2024, subject to review.
This will mitigate any wage reset for the security officers when the contract is renewed or a new service contract is awarded to a different service provider, said the STC.
Security agencies must adopt the new recommendations from Jan 1 2019.
The STC urged security agencies to start planning early and to work with their service buyers to review their operations and manpower needs.
"The increasing demand for security services and the current security climate has accentuated the need for adequate and quality security services.
"Leveraging technology solutions to augment the manpower supply in a tight labour market would be one of the most effective ways to derive better security outcomes and yet moderate increasingly higher manpower costs," it said in a statement.
Mr Robert Wiener, president of the Association of Certified Security Agencies, said that the changes could drive costs up for companies by 30 to 35 per cent.
But the association is hoping to work with buyers from building management to promote the use of technology in security services, which could reduce costs in the long run. "Any initial investment in capital can be typically recouped in about 24 months."
http://www.straitstimes.com/singapo...rs-to-go-up-by-300-over-next-3-years-overtime