Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

SLAS seeks huge new allowance to attract top level graduates

Cabinet paper submitted, but concern over similar demands by parallel services

- By Namini Wijedasa

The Sri Lanka Administra­tive Service (SLAS) has called for a new monthly allowance ranging from Rs 50,000- 15,000 for all its 2,376 officers in a move that highlights the urgent need for a national policy on salaries. A Cabinet memorandum submitted this week claims that a failure to upgrade SLAS salaries has caused a rapid drop in new graduates of high capacity joining the service; and that, during the past few years, the tendency of male graduates—who, the paper says, seek posts with attractive salaries and allowances—to select the SLAS as a career has declined. Officers in grade III were also quitting for jobs that offer higher remunerati­on.

The SLAS proposal for a “multitask management and operationa­l allowance” was submitted to the Cabinet by Public Administra­tion Minister Ranjith Maddumma Bandara this week. It is likely to prompt similar demands from other services which are on similar salary scales as SLAS grades. These include the planning, accountanc­y, scientific, engineerin­g, education administra­tion, and indigenous medicine services.

The paper was not passed this week but Ministers agreed with the justificat­ions for an allowance to “incentivis­e Sri Lanka Administra­tive Service in order to attract skilled individual­s of high potential”. They said it needed further study and appointed a Cabinet subcommitt­ee to make recommenda­tions within two weeks.

The members of the subcommitt­ee are Science and Technology Minister Sarath Amunugama; Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a; Home Affairs Minister Vajira Abeywarden­a; Higher Education Minister Wijayadasa Rajapakshe; and Minister Madduma Bandara.

The SLAS Associatio­n (SLASA) protested against the setting up of a subcommitt­ee in lieu of approving the allowance by striking on Thursday. But it suspended action after a discussion with Minister Madduma Bandara. “I assured them not to worry and that I will try my best,” he told the Sunday Times, adding that the subcommitt­ee will meet for the first time this week.

If granted as suggested, 303 special grade SLAS officers will receive an allowance of Rs 50,000 a month each; 750 grade I officers will receive Rs 45,000 each; 76 grade II officers will get Rs 35,000 each and 1,247 grade III officers will be paid between Rs 30,000 and 15,000 each. The Ministry of Finance says this will cost an additional Rs 1 billion a year.

The Cabinet memorandum points out that SLAS officers handle a multitude of tasks including constituti­onal, developmen­tal, welfare and disaster management. By reason of promotion or transfer, they switch between completely different areas of expertise and must have vast expertise to make challengin­g decisions. They also provide policy direction, implementa­tion and coordinati­on in a multitude of sectors.

The recommenda­tion of the National Salaries and Cadre Commission to pay these allowances to SLAS officers was also presented to Cabinet. Also attached

The Cabinet memorandum points out that SLAS officers handle a multitude of tasks including constituti­onal, developmen­tal, welfare and disaster management.

was a note from President Maithripal­a Sirisena acknowledg­ing that all SLAS officers performed multiple tasks in the service and in offices. As such, they must be appreciate­d in manner different to others the permanent cadre. At the same time, they did not have the opportunit­y to earn private income the way officers in various services did. The President has supported the proposal.

In his observatio­ns, Finance Minister Samaraweer­a has said the Central Bank, State banks, certain corporatio­ns, statutory boards and Stateowned companies have had their salaries and allowances increased by around 20-25 percent every three years through the revision of collective agreements. In the case of SLAS, however, the basic salary alone is revised once every ten years or so.

Last year, the allowances of university academic staff were increased, placing them above SLAS grades, the Finance Ministry says. The take-home pay of several other sectors are also now higher.

However, the granting of an allowance exclusivel­y to the SLAS could raise protest from other services, public officers warned. At least six island executive parallel services (including SLAS) under the purview of the Public Administra­tion Ministry have the same salary structure and annual increments. The total number of officers is 13,072.

“Other categories of profession­als also do the same work,” said one senior official, who did not wish to be named. “There are planning officers, for instance, in divisional secretaria­ts. They handle developmen­t and a lot of other tasks including administra­tion. The parallel all island managerial services have not been granted allowances for many years, not just SLAS.”

It was observed that many key economic functions in areas such as health, education, transport, constructi­on, water, irrigation, sewage, electricit­y, waste management and agricultur­e are led and performed by non-SLAS officers. They are engineers, doctors, planner, educators, scientists, accountant­s and others who also coordinate these activities.

Incentivis­ing just SLAS officers is likely to cause unrest and dissatisfa­ction within Government institutio­ns where a vast majority of employees were typically non-administra­tive service staff, it has been warned. If the allowance is to be approved, therefore, it was advisable to extend it also to other all-island parallel services.

 ??  ?? SLAS officers staged a protest on Thursday protesting against the Cabinet's delay in approving their demand for new allowances. Pic by Amila Gamage
SLAS officers staged a protest on Thursday protesting against the Cabinet's delay in approving their demand for new allowances. Pic by Amila Gamage

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