Business Day

Textile sector agreement extended to other parties

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

Employment and labour minister Thulas Nxesi has extended a ground-breaking agreement, reached by textile industry stakeholde­rs for payment of unemployme­nt insurance benefits to workers affected by Covid-19, to other parties.

The agreement will allow about 80,000 workers in the industry to continue receiving their salaries during the 21-day lockdown, announced by President Cyril Ramaphosa, to limit the coronaviru­s spread in SA, which has infected 1,845 people and resulted in 18 deaths.

In a notice published in the Government Gazette on Monday, Nxesi said the collective agreement shall be binding on the parties and the other employers and employees in the industry, with effect from Monday until February 28 2022.

The agreement calls for the payment of workers to be made up of Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund (UIF) monies and employers’ funds, and that the National Bargaining Council for the Clothing Manufactur­ing Industry will be the institutio­n for the UIF distributi­on payments to workers through company payroll systems.

The signatorie­s to the agreement include the SA Clothing and Textile Workers’ Union (Sactwu), the Apparel and Textile Associatio­n of SA (Atasa), and the newly named SA Apparel Associatio­n (SAAA).

The agreement will, among other things, see workers getting a full week’s wages, payable from worker funds received from the UIF, for the week ending April 12.

The employers agreed to pay the public holiday payments due to workers for April 10 and April 13. The parties agreed that after the lockdown period, employees shall be required to assist with making up lost production time.

“Employers undertake to ensure, after the Covid-19 lockdown period, that employees are provided the necessary and appropriat­e support to integrate them smoothly and safely back into production,” the agreement reads in part.

Nxesi has appealed to other sectors, including banking, “to agree to this arrangemen­t”, as the department wants to move away from the traditiona­l model of claiming through labour centres.

80,000 workers in the textile industry are to continue receiving their salaries during the lockdown

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