George Herald

‘Heartsore but relieved’ after walkout

- Alida de Beer

Tekkie Town CEO Bernard Mostert says he did not expect 100 employees from the head office in Saagmeul Street to follow him and the other managers on their way out of the premises.

In a resignatio­n message to employees on Tuesday 26 June, Mostert and COO Dawie van Niekerk wrote that it was not an easy decision and it left them “heartsore”.

On Wednesday morning, 27 June, Mostert told George Herald that he felt a sense of relief, because he could not continue “in the manner that things were going after the takeover”.

“After the past seven months, I have absolutely no doubt that this was the right decision,” said Mostert. “We cannot work at a place where we are undermined and our business is not allowed to be managed to deliver the best results. Tekkie Town is the most profitable in the Star group, but when Braam began applying the same money management principles in the other businesses in Star, it was met with opposition. The people did not like Braam’s aggressive manner of bringing down costs. If you are overweight and you go on a diet, it is initially difficult, but at the end of the day you are fitter and you live longer. This was what we were busy achieving. For Braam every rand counts and this was where he came head to head with the other businesses’ management­s. A charge sheet was drawn against Braam because he managed to lower the rental of two loss-making shops. If you get into trouble over something like that, it is ludicrous. They also did not want to allow us to use Tekkie Town’s local insurance broker who has given us excellent service. We were forced to join Star’s group insurance that was significan­tly more expensive and could not match our broker’s quote. I cannot accept costs that do not make financial sense.”

The eviction notice from Van Huyssteen, who owns the Tekkie Town head-office complex, will be valid as from end July.

He said the R100-million trust fund started for Tekkie Town employees will be used to support the employees who resigned. “We will be paying them from the fund precisely what they were getting while at Tekkie Town. We are not employing them; we are simply distributi­ng money to them that was set aside for an unlikely crisis. We are taking three months off, but will keep those who have followed us fit and ready. It is actually nice to spend some social time together.”

They have not decided yet about starting Tekkie Town 2, as was hinted by Van Huyssteen recently. “But whatever we do next, it will be from George. Our plan for now is to take time off while the legal proceeding­s go ahead. There is Braam’s claim against Steinhoff, the bonus agreement case according to which the results we would have achieved over three years would have brought a payout of R1-billion to all Tekkie Town employees, and then there is my constructi­ve dismissal case, as well as those of Dawie and Braam.”

An anonymous employee who resigned said, “What they did to the leaders of our business is just not right. I cannot work like this. Braam has brought us to where we are now, we cannot go on without him. We are like a family.”

Star declined to respond to George Herald’s questions, but confirmed the deployment of an interim management team and said that Tekkie Town will do business as usual.

The human resources manager at the Tekkie Town head office did not respond to a message left for her.

 ?? Photos: Alida de Beer ?? The Tekkie Town head-office personnel photograph­ed in high spirits in September 2017 when the company listed on the JSE after its takeover by Steinhoff. INSET: Bernard Mostert and the rest of the management walked out at the Tekkie Town head office,...
Photos: Alida de Beer The Tekkie Town head-office personnel photograph­ed in high spirits in September 2017 when the company listed on the JSE after its takeover by Steinhoff. INSET: Bernard Mostert and the rest of the management walked out at the Tekkie Town head office,...

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