Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Cabinet okays Public Service Act changes

- Felex Share

CABINET has approved principles on the amendment of the Public Service Act as Government moves to allow civil servants to engage in collective bargaining as enshrined in the Constituti­on.

Civil servants have for long been pressing to engage in collective bargaining with their employer and the envisaged amendments will remove inconsiste­nces which have frustrated the realisatio­n of their quest over the years.

This comes as Government is in the process of decompress­ing grades of civil servants in a bid to pay them according to experience, seniority and qualificat­ions.

The Government has also asked its workers to prepare a position paper on their conditions of service for deliberati­ons to take place.

These developmen­ts came out during a National Joint Negotiatin­g Council (NJNC) meeting in Harare last Friday.

The NJNC brings together Government and civil servants negotiator­s. This was the first meeting under the new dispensati­on.

Apex Council chairwoman Mrs Cecelia Alexander led the civil servants while the Government team leader was Mr Simon Masanga.

Speaking after the meeting, Mrs Alexander hailed the progress made towards reviewing the Public Service Act.

“We have been told that the principles for the harmonisat­ion of the laws and, principall­y, amendment to the Public Service Act have been approved by Cabinet,” she said.

“It is an issue we have been waiting for because it is these amendments which will give us the right to collective bargaining as enshrined in Section 65 of the Constituti­on. As it stands, we don’t have bargaining power. We have been told that a first draft Bill is being prepared for debate in Parliament,” Mrs Alexander said.

“With respect to the Collective Bargaining Council, a committee of four people, two from each side, was mandated to convene and make recommenda­tions to the NJNC on how the structure should be establishe­d.”

Mrs Alexander said Government had started de-bunching civil servants’ salary grades.

“Following Apex Council’s request for Government to implement the 2014 agreement to raise the salary of the lowest paid worker to the poverty datum line, the meeting resolved that labour crafts a more current position paper for deliberati­on at the next meeting,” she said.

“Our salaries have been eroded by the price madness though Government has made some interventi­ons. The market continues to behave wildly and we need salaries to be linked to the PDL.

“Coupled with this, Government confirmed that work on de-bunching of salary grades is now in progress. A lot of civil servants are bunched in more or less the same grade regardless of academic (qualificat­ion) and profession­al skills as well as experience, responsibi­lities and additional tasks.”

Bunching of workers started during the formalisat­ion of the multi-currency system in 2009 where civil servants were initially paid a uniform US$100.

She said teachers would know Government’s position on their vacation leave during the next NJNC meeting scheduled for May 11.

Said Mrs Alexander: “Government agreed that it is a statutory right (taking leave) whose suspension was done for expediency.”

Government deferred vacation leave for teachers in 2016 as a cost-cutting measure.

It cited a lack of resources to pay relief teachers during the three-month period that full-time teachers would be away.

Government was spending an estimated $2,5 million in outsourcin­g services from relief teachers.

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