Categories: Insights, Do you know that

Tag: CCNL settore metalmeccanico, formazione continua


28 Jan 2019

DO YOU KNOW THAT… Companies in the metalworking and mechanical engineering sector are required to provide continuing professional development courses for their employees every three years?

Since 1 January 2017 companies in the metalworking and mechanical engineering sector have been required, every three years, to provide workers employed under permanent contracts with continuing professional development courses of a duration of 24 hours per participant, within their working hours and according to the procedures identified by Fondimpresa [Italian Inter-Professional Fund for Continuing Professional Development]. The first three-year period for which this measure is applicable will end on 31 December 2019. Safety training is not included in the 24-hour duration. The training initiatives available to workers are predominantly those on which the company, in possible agreement with the RSU [unitary trade union representation], has provided information to its workers. Alternatively, workers can exercise their right to receive training by requesting to participate in training initiatives aimed at the acquisition of transferable, linguistic, digital, technical or managerial knowledge, that can be used in the working context. If workers have still not participated in training courses by the end of the second year (that is, by 31 December 2018 in the initial phase of application), they may exercise their right during the third year (2019) until they have received 24 hours of training. In such cases, 2/3 of the hours taken up by the training initiative chosen by the worker (16 hours) will be scheduled during working hours, and 1/3 of the hours taken up by said training initiative (8 hours) will be scheduled outside of working hours. If the training initiatives involve an attendance fee, the company must cover the costs, up to a maximum of 300 euros, which may also be supplemented with any available public or private funds. In order for workers to take advantage of this subjective right during the third year of the three-year period, they must make a written request within the 10 working days prior to the start of the training activity in which they intend to participate, and – if requested by the company – submit the documentation necessary for exercising such rights. As a rule, 3% of the total workforce employed by the production unit can be absent at the same time in order to participate in training activities, unless otherwise agreed by the company and provided this is in line with the unit’s technical-productive demands. In companies with up to 200 employees, if the application of the aforementioned percentage generates fractional values, they will be rounded up to the nearest whole number. Any unused hours cannot be carried forward into the hours required for the next three-year period, unless they have remained unused due to technical-organisation demands, including cases where the maximum overall percentage for simultaneous absence has been exceeded. Training initiatives shall be duly documented by the provider or company, and registered. Exercise of the subjective right to receive training shall be subject to reporting to the RSU [unitary trade union representation]; any disagreements shall be reviewed jointly by the Management and the RSU.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Contact

Need information? Write to us and our team of experts will respond as soon as possible.

Fill in the form

More news and insights

17 Mar 2026

Equal pay: green light for the decree on pay equality and wage transparency (People are People, 16 marzo 2026 – Claudia Cerbone, Martina De Angeli)

Claudia Cerbone and Martina De Angeli, professionals at the De Luca & Partners firm, author this article dedicated to the draft legislative decree approved last February 5 by…

16 Mar 2026

Illegitimacy of staff leasing due to violation of the principle of temporariness (Top 24 Lavoro, 27 febbraio 2026 – Vittorio De Luca, Alessandra Zilla)

With judgment no. 4493 of December 19, 2025, the Court of Milan addressed the issue of indefinite-term labor supply (so-called staff leasing). In particular, the Court clarified that,…

10 Mar 2026

The transfer of the employee is lawful when there is incompatibility with the company environment (Camera di Commercio Italo-Francese, 10 marzo 2026 – Vittorio De Luca, Silvia Zulato)

With Order No. 4198 of 25 February 2026, the Italian Supreme Court (Court of Cassation) – Labour Section – reaffirmed that a situation of environmental incompatibility may justify…

3 Mar 2026

Employee monitoring: when “bossware” becomes a legal risk (Agenda Digitale, 2 marzo 2026 – Martina De Angeli)

Monitoring workers through digital tools is a rapidly expanding practice, accelerated by the spread of remote work and the digital transformation of companies. Before adopting these systems, however,…

3 Mar 2026

Melismelis signs the campaign for the 50th anniversary of De Luca & Partners

For the historic labor law firm, the agency developed the 50th-anniversary logo and advertising campaign, managed online and offline media planning, and renewed the website’s visual identity. Milan,…

27 Feb 2026

Dismissals: the Corte costituzionale grants broader discretion to judges and greater scope for reinstatement (I Focus del Sole 24 Ore, 26 febbraio 2026 – Vittorio De Luca e Alessandra Zilla)

The regulation of dismissals continues to represent one of the central pillars of Italian labour law, an area of constant tension between freedom of economic initiative and the…