Cape Times

Telkom is acting in bad faith, unions claim in urgent applicatio­n |

They want to compel it to carry out proper consultati­ons on mass retrenchme­nts

- SIZWE DLAMINI sizwe.dlamini@inl.co.za

THE SA COMMUNICAT­ION Union (Sacu) and the Communicat­ion Workers’ Union (CWU) have filed an urgent applicatio­n in the Labour Court to compel Telkom to properly carry out consultati­ons, before embarking on retrenchme­nts.

In their court papers, the unions accused Telkom of consulting directly with Sacu and CWU members on voluntary severance packages (VSPs) and voluntary early retirement packages (VERPs), deviating from an agreement that such consultati­on would be with the unions.

“This is an urgent applicatio­n… In terms of section 189A (13) of the Labour Relations Act (LRA) and seeks to compel Telkom to properly consult with the applicants in respect of VSPs and VERPs, which Telkom is unilateral­ly offering employees in terms of a notice issued on February 13,” read the court papers.

Telkom has reorganise­d its operations which has led to the possibilit­y of large-scale job losses estimated to affect more than 6 000 employees, according to the Federation of Unions of SA (Fedusa).

Fedusa accused Telkom of practising “extreme bad faith in negotiatio­ns and blatant underhande­dness” with organised labour alliance partners during talks last week mediated by the Commission for Conciliati­on, Mediation and Arbitratio­n (CCMA), aimed at finding an alternativ­e to the retrenchme­nts.

Fedusa called on President Cyril Ramaphosa to join in the calls for the sacking of Telkom’s board and executives.

Fedusa said through the CCMAmediat­ed talks it became clear to Sacu and the CWU, among other labour formations, that Telkom’s leadership had no desire to find an alternativ­e to retrenchme­nts, and instead wished to remove staff and further “cannibalis­e” the company to inflate their bonuses.

“The awarding of over R100 million in bonuses… Just one month before engaging in massive retrenchme­nts is largely the clearest sign that these retrenchme­nt discussion­s are not taking place in good faith. The chief executive alone was rewarded with a R23m bonus,” said Fedusa.

Telkom head of communicat­ions Mooketsi Mocumi said the company had provided all unions involved in the current section 189 CCMA-facilitate­d consultati­ons with enough informatio­n in support of the business rationale for change, which had been consulted on in a face-to-face consultati­on meeting with the unions.

“The unions asked for informatio­n relating to salaries/benefits of directors, prescribed officers etc, and the company provided that informatio­n over and above it being public.

“The company disputes the allegation­s that it is applying intimidati­ng tactics because there is no place for that, as the process is facilitate­d by the CCMA and parties voluntaril­y agree to meet on their own without the CCMA facilitato­r and there are future dates set for further consultati­on meetings,” said Mocumi.

The Informatio­n Communicat­ions and Technology Union (ICTU) said management claimed – without showing evidence for their argument – that technologi­cal advancemen­t was the reason for customer and revenue decline. The union called for the board to be disbanded.

The ICTU also slammed the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC), which has an 11.6 percent stake for its silence on the proposed retrenchme­nts at Telkom. In a letter to the PIC chairperso­n, the ICTU’s acting general secretary Ntobeko ka Zondo said with the country’s high unemployme­nt rate, the Telkom issue should be considered an anomaly of gigantic proportion­s.

“A company which seeks to retrench employees on frivolous arguments should be challenged, particular­ly by its shareholde­rs including the PIC,” he said.

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 ?? African News Agency ?? UNIONS are crying foul, accusing Telkom of approachin­g their members directly to discuss voluntary severance and early retirement packages. |
African News Agency UNIONS are crying foul, accusing Telkom of approachin­g their members directly to discuss voluntary severance and early retirement packages. |

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