Fiji Sun

Tiko hits back at teachers’ body over contracts, pay

- JYOTI PRATIBHA and LOSIRENE LACANIVALU Edited by Ranoba Baoa Feedback: jyotip@fijisun.com.fj

The Permanent Secretary for Education Iowane Tiko has hit back at the Fijian Teachers Associatio­n for misleading teachers on contracts and pay talks. Mr Tiko yesterday reiterated that Government would negotiate all pay rises for civil servants.

The FTA called on Government to remove the short-term contracts for teachers at the 83rd Annual Delegates Conference at Yat Sen School hall in Suva yesterday.

Mr Tiko said FTA was being ‘shallow’ and was misleading the teachers on the new contract initiative.

“FTA has very little current teachers in the executive positions. We don’t know how well they support teachers’ profession­al developmen­t,” Mr Tiko said.

“Even now Government is going to negotiate pay rises for civil servants.

The honourable Prime Minister has assured us that the union will no longer be involved in negotiatin­g pay rise.”

He said Government would negotiate pay rise for civil servants and the ministry had been sitting with the union and discussing issues that needed to be addressed and discussed.

“They think the contract will come to an end or a stop when it expires. That is not the case, we have been informing them that the five-year contract is reviewed every year on performanc­e but we don’t cut them off their employment.

“We are paying the officers according to the work they do,” he added.

The FTA president Netani Druavesi in his opening address pleaded with Prime Minister and acting Minister for Education Voreqe Bainimaram­a to remove short terms contracts because he said it had put teachers and civil servants in an insecure financial situation.

Mr Druavesi said this could affect their performanc­e and consequent­ly the fate of sustaining quality education in Fiji.

He said the 2017 - 2018 National Budget has been very generous in its ambitions towards education.

However, FTA believes the enforcemen­t of conditiona­l contracts which favours renewals when expired is creating insecuriti­es among the teachers and also destabilis­es teachers’ careers and financial savings. Mr Druavesi said most teachers who wish to take long term loans for properties would now be unable to do so and policies would negatively weaken teacher’s security and welfare for sustainabl­e and quality education Mr Druavesi added that despite the few setbacks they have had, they continued to thank Government for the many new initiative­s.

 ?? Photo: Ronald Kumar ?? Fijian Teachers Associatio­n 83rd annual delegates conference chief guest Corena Hzythorpe Federal president Australian Education Union and Ro Teimumu Kepa at the Yat Sen hall on August 15, 2017.
Photo: Ronald Kumar Fijian Teachers Associatio­n 83rd annual delegates conference chief guest Corena Hzythorpe Federal president Australian Education Union and Ro Teimumu Kepa at the Yat Sen hall on August 15, 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji