The Citizen (Gauteng)

Chaos at SABC as staff ‘fired, rehired, fired again’

- Eric Naki

The SA Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n has been criticised for turning its restructur­ing process into chaos – chopping and changing, retrenchin­g, rehiring and firing

The broadcaste­r has been accused by unions of retrenchin­g the wrong employees, giving them packages and then rehiring some and firing others.

Many lost their jobs on 31 March when the SABC retrenched 625 employees. But some were rehired after they were terminated by mistake and others fired after being rehired in error.

This annoyed The Broadcasti­ng, Electronic, Media & Allied Workers Union (Bemawu) and Communicat­ion Workers Union (CWU), who lamented the haphazard manner the SABC implemente­d the section 189 retrenchme­nts.

The unions complained about the rehiring and then dismissal of employees after they were wrongly identified for restructur­ing.

CWU general secretary Aubrey Tshabalala called for the reviewing of the SABC restructur­ing, premised on achieving self-sustainabi­lity by generating its own revenue without relying on the state.

“The SABC should be competent and competitiv­e on all platforms in the broadcasti­ng space. But if you cut staff and terminate or reduce their salaries, that does not help,” he said.

According to Bemawu president Hannes du Buisson, the SABC willy-nilly withdrew employment contracts they offered to some employees they retrenched. One of those was a Bemawu member, Janet Whitton who was retrenched along with her disabled husband.

Shortly after Whitton received her retrenchme­nt letter early this year, she was offered a position as editor: investigat­ions unit, which she did not a apply for. She accepted the offer on 23 March and began serving in the post, which was a 130 scale manager post but offered to her at a 300 scale.

This was far lower than that of a manager although she was managing the unit. However, the SABC later informed her that her employment offer was being withdrawn and her employment would be terminated on 31 May.

She wrote an open letter to the CEO, Madoda Mxakwe, complainin­g about the action.

“There is no employment letter on the table, Ms Whitton has already accepted the offer and she has rendered services in the same position,” Du Buisson said.

He said the union did not accept the withdrawal of the employment offer as it was now an employment contract. The union was also challengin­g the decision to offer Whitton one of two other lower-scale positions without advertisin­g them.

A number of employees who received retrenchme­nt packages were informed their medical aids were being restored and their pension payouts withdrawn as they were the wrong people.

But some staff had already used their packages and were unable to pay back the money. The SABC began deducting money from their salaries.

The SABC spokespers­on could not be reached for comment.

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