Business Day

Silicosis trust for mineworker­s has made steady progress despite hitches

- John Brand ● Brand is convener of the founders’ working group.

In February we marked the fourth anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of the Tshiamiso Trust, founded to carry out the terms of the May 2018 settlement agreement reached between six gold mining groups and claimant attorneys in a well-publicised silicosis and tuberculos­is class action. It’s an opportune time to reflect on the progress of implementi­ng this historic settlement agreement.

The groups involved — African Rainbow Minerals, Anglo American SA, AngloGold Ashanti, Gold Fields, Harmony and Sibanye-Stillwater — are known as the founders under the trust deed. The Tshiamiso Trust is responsibl­e for ensuring that all eligible current and former mineworker­s of the founders from 1965 to 2018 in Southern Africa with silicosis or workrelate­d tuberculos­is (or their dependants, where the mineworker has passed away) are compensate­d in terms of the settlement agreement and the trust deed.

The Tshiamiso Trust is governed independen­tly from the founders by a board of trustees — three nominated by the companies, two by the claimants’ attorneys and one by the government. It is chaired by Prof May Hermanus, an independen­t trustee agreed jointly by the companies and the claimants’ attorneys.

Hermanus, formerly chief inspector of mines in the department of minerals & energy and executive director at the Council for Scientific & Industrial Research, spent part of her career in the trade union and NGO movements.

The founders are gratified to note that by April 8 2024 the trust had paid more than R1.5bn in benefits to about 16,500 claimants (see detailed informatio­n on the Tshiamiso Trust website). The founders committed R845m over the 12-year lifetime of the trust to fund its operations in pursuit of its objective of providing benefits to eligible claimants. While there has been criticism that progress has been slow, the founders believe it has been reasonable given that:

● After the settlement in May 2018 a great deal of legal and other processes had to be followed, as set out in the settlement agreement approved by the South Gauteng High Court;

● The trustees had to work — at the height of Covid-19 — to establish complex systems, processes, personnel and infrastruc­ture, including a sophistica­ted informatio­n technology system, that would enable the trust to effectivel­y and efficientl­y provide benefits to eligible claimants, in the amounts and on the terms set out in the trust deed; and

● It took close to 18 months after its establishm­ent for the trust to be able to begin making routine benefit payments to eligible claimants.

According to informatio­n supplied by the Tshiamiso Trust on its website over the past few years, there was a surge of claims in the early period from when claims could be lodged. After that initial surge, the number of lodgements showed a steady decline and so have the number of payments. This is a trend that will probably continue, given that as time passes it is likely that fewer individual­s with potential claims will learn about the opportunit­ies available to them from the trust.

Nonetheles­s, there may be remote regions across Southern Africa from where the industry drew labour that have not yet been reached through the tracking and tracing work of the trust, which continues. The Tshiamiso Trust’s latest data shows a significan­t gap between the more than 136,000 claims lodged and the number of payments made to eligible claimants.

There are reasons for this. First, claims must be verified for eligibilit­y.. After careful examinatio­n, more than half of the lodged claims have been found to be ineligible. At this stage, of the more than 80,000 claims assessed by the trust’s independen­t medical certificat­ion panels, more than 50,000 claims have been found to be medically ineligible. This is because these claimants do not meet the criteria for certificat­ion of the silicosis and occupation­al tuberculos­is medical conditions covered by the settlement agreement.

Also, more than 10,000 claims have been deferred until more medical informatio­n can be obtained about them, while just more than 20,000 claims have been found by the trust’s medical certificat­ion panels to be medically eligible. After considerat­ion by a medical certificat­ion panel, each one served by medical experts, each claim needs to pass through the trust’s subsequent processes, which include the trust certificat­ion committee, the agent representi­ng the founders and payment into the claimant’s bank account.

The data trends are encouragin­g in that they show that the trust’s systems, processes, employees and infrastruc­ture are working efficientl­y, in that the trust is processing claims reasonably quickly through these stages once the benefit medical examinatio­n stage has been finalised (where this is a necessary part of the claim), and once all the required informatio­n is available.

It has been difficult for some claimants to gain access to Tshiamiso medical facilities for benefit medical examinatio­ns. This is in part due to limited medical capacity in parts of Southern Africa and the need to make mutually acceptable arrangemen­ts with host government­s in neighbouri­ng countries. The trust is working hard to address the resulting medical examinatio­n backlog.

About 42% of claims received have been made by dependants of deceased ex-miners. Often there is insufficie­nt medical evidence available to process these claims and in these cases the trust assists dependant claimants to obtain outstandin­g informatio­n.

There are several notable features of the distributi­on between the various benefit classes under the trust deed in relation to payments made thus far.

Most notable is the large proportion of payments categorise­d as silicosis class 1 — about 75% of the silicosis payments to living claimants so far. This is the benefit class that covers those with an early stage of silicosis, where the lung function impairment is minimal. It is noteworthy that this class consists of a group of workers not covered by the statutory compensati­on scheme administer­ed by the Medical Bureau for Occupation­al Diseases, and that the degree of silicosis suffered by such claimants is less than had previously been envisaged.

The proportion of claimants in the more severe benefit classes 2 and 3 may appear low to some people, but this proportion is based on the medical evidence submitted to, and approved by, the trust’s medical certificat­ion panels. This means the silicosis claimants’ health condition is, overall, not as seriously affected as many might have said was the case. It also means these claimants enjoy a better quality of life than may have been originally considered to be the case. This deals only with living claimants, and it is possible that historical­ly these ratios might not have been the same.

The benefit payment for a class 1 silicosis claim (before an inflation adjustment each February from 2022) was initially R70,000, while for classes 2 and 3 it was R150,000 and R250,000, respective­ly. The founders are pleased that the trust has made material progress in the implementa­tion of the class action settlement, with the trust’s systems, processes, personnel and infrastruc­ture working well.

Given the complexiti­es of the settlement agreement, and of the logistics of establishi­ng the trust’s structures and facilities over such a vast area of the subcontine­nt, the founders are satisfied with the progress made.

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