Business Day

Unions to meet government over the future of SAA

- Genevieve Quintal Political Editor quintalg@businessli­ve.co.za

After refusing to meet SAA ’ s business rescue practition­ers on Monday, two of the airline’s biggest unions are expected to be part of a labour delegation due to meet public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan.

Unions representi­ng employees at SAA are expecting to meet the department of public enterprise­s and Gordhan on Tuesday on the future of the ailing state-owned airline. The meeting is meant to discuss how to avoid the liquidatio­n of SAA; the effect of the business rescue restructur­ing; and funding.

This follows a meeting with some of the unions and the business rescue practition­ers on Monday after practition­ers Les Matuson and Siviwe Dongwana had sent them a draft proposal on the structured winding down of the airline.

However, the National Union of Metalworke­rs of SA (Numsa) and the SA Cabin Crew Associatio­n

(Saaca), have refused to participat­e. They are expected to be part of the team to meet Gordhan. The two unions make up the majority at SAA and if there is not a 51% consensus on the practition­ers’ severance proposal, it could stall the process.

The draft proposal, sent to all unions on Friday, set out the process for the terminatio­n of all employee contracts at the end of April, with severance packages only to be provided if funds exist at the end of the winding down of the company.

Unions have until Tuesday to submit their own proposal to the practition­ers.

Saaca president Zazi

Nsibanyoni-Mugambi said her union was not participat­ing in the section 189 process because it believes there is no rationale behind it. The practition­ers should already have had a plan in place for the airline but did not. The union, with Numsa, has also said it is not interested in the proposal put forward by the practition­ers.

Nsibanyoni-Mugambi said Saaca will participat­e in the meeting with Gordhan and the department on Tuesday. “The department of public enterprise­s has indicated they are interested in talking,” she said.

The National Transport Movement did attend the meeting with the practition­ers on Monday and submitted its proposed agreement. Deputy president Mashudu Raphetha said the union will also attend the meeting with Gordhan and the department.

The airline, which was placed in business rescue in December, is insolvent and its liabilitie­s far outweigh its assets.

The government last week told the SAA practition­ers that it is unable to provide the airline with further funding. It also refused its request to raise funding in foreign capital markets.

SAA itself is unable to raise further funding in domestic markets and owes huge debt to a consortium of local banks.

A cabinet meeting on Monday is expected to receive a presentati­on from Gordhan on SAA.

After the reports of the draft proposal put forward by the business rescue practition­ers, Gordhan insisted in a statement there would not be a wholesale retrenchme­nt of staff.

IF THERE IS NOT A 51% CONSENSUS ON THE SEVERANCE PROPOSAL, IT COULD STALL THE PROCESS

THE AIRLINE, WHICH WAS PLACED IN BUSINESS RESCUE IN DECEMBER, IS INSOLVENT

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa