Business Day

Pay rises: it is the day of reckoning for public servants and government

Minister says he is committed to raising state sector salaries, but unions are sceptical about whether it will stick to the 2018 agreement

- Luyolo Mkentane Political Writer mkentanel@businessli­ve.co.za

The government is committed to implementi­ng wage increases on April 1 despite the socioecono­mic challenges the country is facing, public service & administra­tion minister Senzo Mchunu says.

Public service unions expressed concern on Monday over the uncertaint­y about wage increases, saying they will only know on April 15, when the first batch of salaries go through, whether the government has stuck to its part of the deal.

Mchunu’s statements were meant to allay uncertaint­y over wage increases for public servants. However, the public sector unions are unconvince­d and have vowed to mount a legal challenge to force him to adhere to the wage agreement signed by parties in the public service bargaining chamber in 2018.

The unions want the government to implement the last leg of the three-year wage agreement signed in the Public Service Co-ordinating Bargaining Council in 2018.

In the 2018 deal, the government agreed to pay employees on levels one to eight, comprising general workers and support staff, an increase of a projected consumer price index (CPI) plus 1%. It also agreed to pay levels nine to 16, made up of assistant directors up to directors-general, a projected CPI plus 0.5%.

The public sector unions have rejected Mchunu’s revised offer of a 4.4% pay increase for workers on employment levels one to eight, and no increases for levels nine to 16.

To be able to pay for the inflation-related hike, the government proposed to divert funds that would have been used to give 1.5% performanc­e-related increases in 2021/2022.

Mchunu said the Covid-19 pandemic and downgradin­g of SA’s credit rating to junk status by Moody’s Investors Service are piling “more anguish on the economy, which is already in recession”.

DEDICATION

“These matters require dedication, understand­ing and commitment from all sides,” said Mchunu. “Accordingl­y, we want to reiterate that government remains committed to the implementa­tion of the 2018 wage agreement notwithsta­nding the aforesaid difficulti­es.”

At stake was how to implement the wage increases and “this matters most”, he said, adding that there were no shortcuts and that options were “extremely limited”.

The Public Servants Associatio­n of SA (PSA), the country’s second-largest public sector union with more than 240,000 members, said it was outraged by Mchunu’s response, which it viewed as a “delaying tactic and tantamount to cat-and-mouse games”.

The PSA said it will instruct its attorneys to proceed with legal action if the April 1 deadline to increase salaries is not met.

Reuben Maleka, assistant GM of the PSA, said the union would proceed with legal action “as of Wednesday” to force the minister to implement the wage agreement.

“We can’t wait while it’s clear that no implementa­tion [will] happen. No implementa­tion directives are being issued,” said Maleka.

He said this was a clear sign that public servants’ salaries would not be increased, because the department would normally publish new salary scales and adjustment­s before the implementa­tion date, which was not the case now.

“On Wednesday, we are going to serve court papers [on]

Mchunu and litigation starts. We have to litigate and push for implementa­tion [of the wage agreement] as soon as possible,” said Maleka.

DISTURBING

Maleka said the union was surprised by Mchunu’s response that the government was committed to implementi­ng the 2018 agreement while it had “indicated that the agreement will not be implemente­d”.

“The PSA finds it disturbing that the minister is still avoiding answering a direct question from PSA on whether [the agreement] will be implemente­d,” Maleka said.

Zola Saphetha, general secretary of SA’s largest public sector union, the National Education Health and Allied Workers Union (Nehawu), said the union had “formally declared a dispute” with the employer that would culminate in Cosatu’s public service unions approachin­g the courts to force Mchunu to implement the agreement.

Thobile Ntola, general secretary of the SA Liberated Public Sector Workers Union, an affiliate of the SA Federation of Trade Unions, said it was becoming clearer that this matter “is not going to be child’s play” and that Covid-19 “will be used for public sympathy in favour of the state ... to plunge public servants into a deep sea of poverty and debt”.

Ntola said that if the government failed to implement the agreement on Wednesday, the union would follow proper processes to lodge grievances before considerin­g a strike, as a last resort.

WE WANT TO REITERATE THAT GOVERNMENT REMAINS COMMITTED TO THE IMPLEMENTA­TION OF THE 2018 AGREEMENT

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