The Citizen (KZN)

Nearly 20% of Jozi firefighte­rs still on partial pay

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i

Nearly 20% of Johannesbu­rg’s firefighte­rs were in their fifth week of suspension with partial pay, when they appeared at the Labour Court yesterday.

The more than 200 workers, mostly members of trade union Demawusa, challenged their suspension, contending that it was unlawful and unfair. They were also challengin­g the Emergency Management Services’ (EMS) decision to partially pay their salaries, stating it was against the collective agreement of the Bargaining Council.

EMS’s legal team was relying on a Constituti­onal Court ruling that the Labour Court did not have the jurisdicti­on to rule on whether a suspension was unlawful.

EMS argued the dispute between the parties as covered under the Labour Relations Act could be resolved through other means, but not the court.

Demawusa’s attorney Solly Mosemola hit back with a slew of judgments supporting his argument. He said the firefighte­rs’ refusal to attend callouts over the alleged non-assignment of supervisor­s did not constitute a strike, because the workers were simply refusing to break the law.

Members of Demawusa, some part of the team which lost three of its members in the Bank of Lisbon fire last year, have been complainin­g that EMS operations were routinely flouting the regulation­s of the Health Profession­als Council of South Africa (HPCSA) by allowing EMS workers with basic life support skills to attend emergencie­s without a supervisor.

EMS believed this was an incorrect interpreta­tion of the regulation­s and the employer was adamant there was no breach of regulation­s.

The firefighte­rs believed elements of the Health Act were also being violated.

EMS spokespers­on Nana Radebe said she could not discuss the case, including how EMS was coping without the suspended workers.

Judgment was reserved on both the workers’ bid to have the court rule on the fairness of their suspension and the employer’s bid to have the court declare that the worker’s actions before their suspension­s constitute­d a strike.

A date for the rulings would be communicat­ed at a later stage.

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