The Citizen (KZN)

Workers lose job appeal

EKURHULENI: CLEANERS WANTED PERMANENT POSTS AFTER CONTRACT EXPIRED

- Zoë Postman

Judge rules they should each be paid compensati­on of R24k instead of R6k.

The Johannesbu­rg Labour Court has dismissed the case of about 200 former Ekurhuleni municipal workers who claimed they should have been made permanent employees and should be reinstated after being dismissed, but also increased their compensati­on from R6 000 to R24 000 per worker.

The order was handed down by Acting Judge Chiman Patel this week.

The workers were first employed by Ekurhuleni municipali­ty under a job creation programme called Lungile Mtshali Developmen­t Plan Project in 2014. They were employed to clean the streets, drains, old age homes, municipal buildings, cemeteries and parks.

The programme ended in June 2015 and the workers’ contracts were terminated. Two months before the terminatio­n, the workers referred the issue to the South

African Local Government Bargaining Council (SALGBC), with the help of Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR), arguing that they should be made permanent employees of the municipali­ty.

In December 2015, while the workers were waiting for their case to be heard at the bargaining council, they were hired by a company called Hlaniki Investment Holdings to perform the same jobs for the municipali­ty.

In September 2016, the workers referred another case to the bargaining council arguing that Hlaniki was acting as a Temporary Employment Service (TES) or labour broker for the municipali­ty and they should have been made permanent employees after three months.

Both the workers’ cases were heard at the bargaining council by commission­er Timothy Boyce in May 2018. Boyce found that the municipali­ty should have made the workers permanent and made an arbitratio­n award of R6 000 per worker. But he did not find that the municipali­ty hired Hlaniki as a labour broker. This meant that the workers were not entitled to having their jobs reinstated.

LHR took Boyce’s ruling on review to the Labour Court, arguing that he had not looked beyond Hlaniki’s contract and assessed the actual implementa­tion of the programme.

“The arbitrator misidentif­ied the true nature of the enquiry, and when determinin­g whether a TES relationsh­ip existed between Hlaniki, the municipali­ty and the [workers], confined himself to the written terms of the contract, and further confined himself to the descriptio­n of the parties as appeared on the contract between Hlaniki, the [workers] and GEP,” read LHR’s court papers. LHR said that Hlaniki was hired by the municipali­ty to recruit, provide and manage the workers.

But Patel disagreed in his judgment, stating that the core business of Hlaniki, according to the service level agreement between Hlaniki and the municipali­ty, was not to provide labour but to act as a project manager for the Lungile Mtshali Developmen­t Plan Project.

Patel sided with Boyce, stating his decision to compensate the workers instead of reinstatin­g them was “one that a reasonable commission­er would have arrived at”.

“I agree with [Boyce] when he concluded that reinstatem­ent is not reasonably practical because there was never intention by [the municipali­ty] to employ the [workers] permanentl­y. It was not reasonable to permanentl­y employ the [workers] as the work was for a limited duration,” read the judgment.

But he said Boyce’s award on compensati­on was not one which a reasonable commission­er would have arrived at.

Based on the length of service, how the workers were dismissed and the reasons for their dismissal, Patel said the just and equitable compensati­on would be 12 months’ remunerati­on. This amounts to R24 000 per worker as opposed to R6 000.

In response to the judgment, William Gundwane, one of the workers, said: “They could have kept the R24 000 and given us our jobs back because we want to think permanentl­y and not temporary. We want our jobs back.”

He said the workers did not know when they were going to get compensate­d by the municipali­ty.

“I’m going to be a madala [old man] by the time we get that money and I have so much debt to pay so all that money will go there … I don’t feel like a human being in this country.”

Republishe­d from Groundup

I don’t feel like a human being in this country

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