The Sun (Malaysia)

Board to review grouses against HRDF

- BY V. RAGANANTHI­NI

KUALA LUMPUR: Human Resources Minister M. Kula Segaran ( pix) said an independen­t board will be set up to look into complaints regarding the Human Resource Developmen­t Fund (HRDF) and, if there is a need, a forensic audit will be conducted on the organisati­on, after a town hall meeting which saw training providers roasting HRDF officials.

In addition, the selection and approval process for the consolidat­ed pool fund, which 30% of the levy collected from employers are channelled into, will be reviewed. In 2017, some RM712 million was collected as levy, of which RM480.46 million was disbursed. The pool fund stood at RM198.316 million as at 2017. The allocation is earmarked for HRDF’s human capital strategic initiative­s.

“In the last 13 days of my office, I have gotten far more love letters about this organisati­on compared to others,” Kula said.

The two-hour long town hall meeting saw disgruntle­d training providers bring up issues of lack of transparen­cy pertaining to tenders, lack of engagement and quality of training providers commission­ed by HRDF.

One participan­t alleged that tenders by HRDF have seen participat­ion by their own board members, in a clear case of conflict of interest.

HRDF CEO Datuk CM Vignaesvar­an Jeyandran, who was in attendance, acknowledg­ed that the organisati­on was short staffed and is unable to deal with complaints channelled to the organisati­on within 48 hours, as stipulated.

“I agree communicat­ions should be better set up but we are in the midst of expanding our manpower, because for one million trainings that we do, we only have 300 people working to do the one million coverage. So we are in the midst of expanding our manpower, we will definitely speed up the process and open a communicat­ion line,” he said.

Kula said he has instructed the secretary-general, Dr Mohd Gazali Abas, to look into a mechanism that would enable complaints and feedback be channelled online, as both the Ministry of Human Resource and HRDF have websites, in the name of transparen­cy.

Meanwhile, Kula said if allegation­s of board members being involved in tenders are found to be true, they will be removed from the board on Monday.

“If any of the board members are confirmed to be a service provider, on Monday he will be removed,” said Kula.

Vignaesvar­an said HRDF board members were appointed by the former minister, Datuk Seri Richard Riot, and are representa­tives of trade associatio­ns who pay levy, as provided for under the PSMB Act 2001.

He said he has provided Kula with a “review” of the current board members of HRDF.

On another note, Kula said action will be taken against errant HRDF-registered employers who default on their levy payments. Currently, only 50% of registered employers are contributi­ng.

Firms registered with HRDF with more than 10 employers are subject to a levy amounting to 1% of their employees’ monthly wages, whereas those with between five and nine employees are subject to a 0.5% levy. The levy covers 63 sub-sectors in the services, manufactur­ing as well as mining and quarrying sector.

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