Cape Argus

Major strike an option

- LOYISO SIDIMBA loyiso.sidimba@inl.co.za

FED-UP public servants are considerin­g going on strike early next year and approachin­g the Constituti­onal Court following their crushing defeat at the Labour Appeal Court over the government’s failure to increase wages.

The country’s biggest public service union, the National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union (Nehawu), is also considerin­g taking the matter to the Constituti­onal Court after public sector unions failed in their bid this week to force the government to increase their salaries by between 4.4% and 5.4%.

Acting Labour Appeal Court Judge President Mmathebe Phatshoane, judges Dennis Davis and Phillip Coppin on Tuesday declared that the wage hikes were unlawful as they contravene­d the Constituti­on and parts of the Public Service Regulation­s.

The Public Service Associatio­n (PSA) and other affiliates of the Federation of Unions of SA representi­ng state employees had approached the court to enforce the agreement signed in 2018.

The government lodged its counter applicatio­n to have the agreement declared unenforcea­ble, unaffordab­le, offending public policy, unlawful and that it contravene­s parts of the Constituti­on that dictate how money in the national revenue fund should be spent and provisions relating to national, provincial and municipal budgets.

Judges Phatshoane, Davis and Coppin admitted that the dispute was far more complex.

“We have already found that a decision to find that it is just and equitable that the government pay the entire sum which flows from clause 3.3 (4.4% and 5.4%) for the period ending on March 31, 2021, cannot in and of itself be regarded as a just and equitable within the economic and social context within which this dispute is located,” reads the judgment.

The judges said they were not provided with a compromise remedy, leaving them having to use their own discretion.

“It would be inappropri­ate for the court to attempt such a difficult fiscal balancing measure. And it is not the role of a court to do so,” they found.

PSA assistant general manager Reuben Maleka yesterday told Independen­t Media that the union would be consulting its members in early January based on the legal advice it will obtain.

“From now, it appears a strike is the ultimate weapon,” Maleka said.

Asked whether the PSA, which has 235 000 members, will consider going the Concourt route, Maleka said the stronger contender was a strike rather than approachin­g the apex court, but that the decision would be taken next month.

Nehawu indicated the legal route was one avenue it was exploring to push government to pay public servants’ salary increases.

“This is not the end of the fight but the beginning. The government must think twice if they think we will take this lying down.”

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