Singapore
Singapore
Vesak Day will now fall on a Friday, taking the number of long public holiday weekends in 2023 to seven.
SINGAPORE: There will be a total of seven long public holiday weekends next year, up from six, following a revision to the date for Vesak Day which will now fall on a Friday.
The Ministry of Manpower (MOM) on Thursday (Sep 29) said that it has gazetted Jun 2, 2023 as the new public holiday for Vesak Day following the Singapore Buddhist Federation’s (SBF) announcement on the revised date. The previously announced date for Vesak Day was Jun 3, which is a Saturday.
In a statement on its website, SBF said that it had earlier advised the Manpower Ministry on the Jun 3 date for Vesak Day, as determined in reference to the Standard Chinese-Western Multi-Year Almanac.
“Upon receiving feedback from members of the public, we have verified the date against other Chinese almanacs and have established that based on the Mahayana tradition, the date of Vesak Day 2023 shall fall on Jun 3, 2023 which coincides with the 15th day of the Fourth Lunar Month,” said SBF.
The Federation apologised for any inconvenience caused and said that it would conduct additional checks and verifications in future to prevent similar occurrences.
Eight public holidays next year fall on a Friday, Sunday or Monday.
As Chinese New Year falls on consecutive days on Sunday, Jan 22 and Monday, Jan 23 next year, they will be part of a single long weekend of four days. Jan 24, a Tuesday, will also be a public holiday.
Three public holidays fall on a Sunday:
– New Year’s Day (Jan 1)
– First day of Chinese New Year (Jan 22)
– Deepavali (Nov 12)
Three public holidays fall on a Monday:
– Second day of Chinese New Year (Jan 23)
– Labour Day (May 1)
– Christmas Day (Dec 25)
Two public holidays falls on a Friday:
– Good Friday (Apr 7)
– Vesak Day (Jun 2)
The other public holidays are:
– Hari Raya Puasa (Saturday, Apr 22)
– Hari Raya Haji (Thursday, Jun 29)
– National Day (Wednesday, Aug 9)
Employees who are required to work on a public holiday are entitled to an extra day’s salary at the basic rate of pay, in addition to their gross rate of pay for that day, said MOM.
Employers and employees may mutually agree to substitute a public holiday for another working day.
Employers also have the option of granting time-off-in-lieu, based on a mutually agreed number of hours, for working on a public holiday for the following group of employees: Workmen earning more than S$4,500 a month; non-workmen earning more than S$2,600 a month; and all managers and executives.
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