Business Day

Public servants give state seven days

• Government gets ultimatum to respond to demands

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

The cash-strapped government has been given seven days to respond to a list of demands by the Public Servants Associatio­n (PSA), whose members marched to the Treasury offices in Pretoria on Thursday calling for above-inflation increases. The PSA’s one-day strike follows a deadlock in negotiatio­ns at the Public Service Co-ordinating Bargaining Council, resulting in the union receiving a strike certificat­e.

The cash-strapped government has been given seven days to respond to a list of demands by the Public Servants Associatio­n (PSA), whose members marched to the Treasury offices in Pretoria on Thursday, calling for above-inflation increases.

In a show of force, thousands went on marches across the country to register unhappines­s over the government’s unilateral implementa­tion of a 3% wage offer for the country’s more than 1.3-million public servants.

The PSA’s one-day strike followed a deadlock in negotiatio­ns at the public service co-ordinating bargaining council, resulting in the union receiving a strike certificat­e. This was after acting public service & administra­tion minister Thulas Nxesi implemente­d the government’s final offer of a 3% increase as per the numbers in finance minister Enoch Godongwana’s mediumterm budget policy statement.

The move was seen as a win for the government, which is trying to rein in the public sector wage bill to an average annual growth rate of 1.8%. At more than R660bn, staff costs account for more than a third of government spending.

“As far as I am concerned, we have pencilled in 3% and we have pencilled [that] for the next few years as part of the carry-through costs of that 3%. Whether there will be an agreement above that I can’t say, but I doubt [it],” Godongwana said on Tuesday. “There’s no money, that’s all I know,” the minister said

At the Pretoria march, union members held placards reading: “Give us Phala Phala money, done deal, case closed”, “No to 3%”, “Reject 3%, time to fight back”, “Stop attacking collective bargaining” and “Public servants are bleeding”.

Other placards stated: “We want a real salary increase, no manga manga business”, and “Government still owes us our 2020 salary increase”.

Addressing marchers outside the Treasury offices in Pretoria, PSA president Lufuno Mulaudzi accused the government of taking public servants for granted, saying “we are rejecting this nonsense of 3% they are giving us”. The union’s members said

they are tired of being poor and living below the breadline due to the rising cost of living on sharp increases in the prices of food, fuel, transport and electricit­y.

Mulaudzi handed a list of demands to Treasury acting COO Laura Mseme, calling for a one-year, 10% increase across the board and the continuati­on of the R1,000 after-tax cash gratuity beyond March 2023.

‘ARROGANT’

“We are dealing with a very arrogant government. We can’t tolerate this kind of nonsense. They were not mandated by anyone to implement 3%. We are not backing down [from our demands]. We are giving him [President Cyril Ramaphosa] seven days to respond to our demands,” Mulaudzi said, emphasisin­g that failure to do so would result in a total shutdown of government services.

Mseme promised the demands would be forwarded to Godongwana, who she said was on an internatio­nal trip.

The PSA, which represents more than 235,000 members and is affiliated to the Federation of Unions of SA (Fedusa), also led marches in the Eastern Cape, the Northern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal and the Free State, and a march to parliament in Cape Town.

Department of public service & administra­tion spokespers­on Moses Mushi claimed the oneday industrial action had no effect on government services as employees were largely at their workstatio­ns.

“None at all,” Mushi said when asked about the strike’s impact on service delivery.

“Public servants are at work, things were just normal, we didn’t have any disruption­s.”

PSA assistant GM Reuben Maleka disagreed, saying: “The strike was a success. Our members went all out, and it was not just PSA members, there were others from various unions too supporting the workers’ cause.”

Maleka said should the government fail to respond satisfacto­rily to the PSA’s demands within a week, “we are going to intensify and make sure there’ sa full-blown indefinite strike in the public sector”.

The PSA and public service unions aligned with Cosatu initially demanded a 10% wage increase at the start of negotiatio­ns in May, but lowered the figure to 6.5% in line with the headline inflation rate forecast by the Reserve Bank for 2022.

When Nxesi announced he would implement the 3% offer, which includes a R1,000 aftertax gratuity that ends in March 2023, the unions reverted to their 10% demand.

Public Service Co-ordinating Bargaining Council (PSCBC) general secretary Frikkie de Bruin said in a statement this week the National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union, the Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union, the Democratic Nursing Organisati­on of SA, the Health and Other Service Personnel Trade Union of SA and the SA Policing Union had “all been afforded certificat­es of nonresolut­ion”.

He said these unions would have the right to issue a sevenday notice to the PSCBC to begin strike action “when and if they decided to do the same”.

Oxford Economics Africa senior political analyst Louw Nel said : “Time to find a resolution to the impasse between unions and government is running out, and union leaders recognise that with the festive season fast approachin­g, the opportunit­y to strike is now.”

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