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Part II of the Convention. Progressive abolition of fee-charging employment agencies. The Committee notes the Government’s report received in September 2010 indicating that the National Directorate for Labour Inspection does not have the information asked for in the direct request of 2006. The Government adds that no process has been established for the inspection of fee‑charging employment agencies. The Government also states that it is awaiting the opinion of the Committee on International Affairs in relation to the Private Employment Agencies Convention, 1997 (No. 181). The Committee recalls that the National Employment Directorate, in its reply to the questionnaire for the General Survey of 2010 on employment instruments, stated that the most feasible thing would be to encourage the legislators to adopt a law empowering the Ministry of Labour and Social Security to regulate, coordinate and control private employment agencies. The Committee recalls that any State that has accepted Part II of the Convention undertakes to abolish fee-charging employment agencies conducted with a view to profit. Costa Rica ratified the Convention in 1960, without fixing a time limit for the abolition of fee-charging employment agencies. The Committee therefore requests the Government to complete its procedures for the ratification of Convention No. 181, which would involve the immediate denunciation of Convention No. 96. The Committee requests the Government to supply information on the proceedings in the Legislative Assembly for ratifying Convention No. 181.
[The Government is asked to reply in detail to the present comments in 2012.]
1. Part II of the Convention. Progressive abolition of fee-charging employment agencies conducted with a view to profit. The Committee notes the Government’s statement in the report received in September 2005 to the effect that a specific time frame for the abolition of fee-charging employment agencies has not been established and that the National Employment Directorate is always vigilant in its supervisory function when it identifies any anomalies in this respect. The Committee requests the Government to provide general information in its next report on the manner in which Convention No. 96 is applied, including summaries of inspection reports, information on the number and nature of the contraventions reported and other particulars relating to the application of the Convention in practice (for example, the expansion of the activities of private employment agencies and the measures adopted by the competent authority to supervise the activities of such agencies).
2. Revision of Convention No. 96. The Government indicates in its report that the principal functions of the National Employment Placement Council include establishing the policies and action governing public and private employment services at the national level (section 3(b) of Regulation No. 29219-MTSS of 22 December 2001, which was also mentioned in relation to the application of the Employment Service Convention, 1948 (No. 88)). Furthermore, the document entitled “Employment policy for Costa Rica” of the Ministry of Labour and Social Security (March 2004) indicates that the National Employment Information, Guidance and Placement System (SNIOIE) is entrusted with the responsibility of collaborating with private employment agencies, while observing that private employment agencies have been prohibited by law and that the approval of the Private Employment Agencies Convention, 1997 (No. 181), concerning which a decision is pending in Congress, would facilitate employment intermediation through the regulation of cooperation between such agencies and the public employment service (page 38 of the above document). The Committee emphasizes that Convention No. 181 acknowledges the role played by private employment agencies in the operation of the labour market. Furthermore, the Governing Body of the ILO has invited States which are parties to Convention No. 96 to contemplate ratifying Convention No. 181, the ratification of which would involve the immediate denunciation of Convention No. 96 (document GB. 273/LILS/4(Rev.1), 273rd Session, Geneva, November 1998). The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed of the progress made with regard to the legislative and other procedures necessary for the ratification of Convention No. 181.
The Committee notes that the Government refers in its report to measures taken by the competent authorities to regulate the functioning of fee-charging employment agencies conducted with a view to profit and those without a view to profit in application of the provisions of Part III of the Convention. It is obliged to remind the Government that the Convention was ratified with acceptance of the provisions of its Part II and not Part III as the Government claims. Part II provide for the progressive abolition of fee-charging employment agencies conducted with a view to profit and regulation of other agencies and this remains the obligation of the Government.
The Committee therefore requests the Government to advise on the measures taken or proposed to be taken in respect of Part II.