Sowetan

Guards wait for payment from bosses

Pension fund missing contributi­ons

- Thuli Zungu Tel: (011) 280-3086. E-mail: zungut@sowetan.co.za or write to PO Box 6663, Johannesbu­rg, 2000

About 40 security guards may get their full pension fund payout only after their employer, Zabalaza General Business Enterprise, pays their outstandin­g contributi­ons.

Zabalaza employees, who were employed for a threeyear term, said they got the shock of their lives when they were paid a pension amount that did not meet their expectatio­ns.

Madiele Liale, 45, said: “We mostly started working at the security company called Zabalaza on January 1 2015, but the contributi­ons were sent to the Private Security Sector Provident Fund (PSSPF) on May 15 in 2016.”

Though the employer was supposed to add their portion, they did not. Instead of getting a payout of R11 000, Liale was paid only R2 500, he said.

“All the employees whose contracts ended in November last year received between R2 500 and R2 700, while others got nothing,” he said.

Sibusiso Mathenjwa, 42, said there were guards whose Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund and provident fund deductions were never paid to the UIF.

He said the fund administra­tors knew this but had not opened a criminal case against their employer.

Zabalaza referred media queries to the fund and Sindiswa Changuion, of the PSSPF, confirmed that Zabalaza was a noncomplia­nt employer.

She said the company did not pay the employees’ pension fund on time and in full.

Changuion added that Zabalaza owed outstandin­g contributi­ons and schedules to the fund.

Changuion said that after talks with the company, it signed an acknowledg­ement of debt agreement; the company acknowledg­es that it owes the fund money and agreed to settle the outstandin­g amounts in terms of the agreement.

However, it defaulted and by doing so did not meet the terms of the payment agreement but the employer is still responsibl­e for paying the normal monthly contributi­ons to the fund.

Changuion also said the outstandin­g monies would be paid to the employees.

“In terms of the partial withdrawal payments which were subsequent­ly paid to members, the latter are paid with payment from the fund where the employer is noncomplia­nt,” said Changuion.

She said the partial payment was made up of the contributi­ons that have been received from the employer and that have been allocated to member records.

The remainder of the benefit will be distribute­d only after the employer has paid all the outstandin­g contributi­ons and provided the correspond­ing contributi­on schedules, she said.

 ?? / 123RF ?? Security firm Zabalaza is not complying with fund agreements, according to the Private Security Sector Provident Fund.
/ 123RF Security firm Zabalaza is not complying with fund agreements, according to the Private Security Sector Provident Fund.
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