Tag: salary

  • Workers must be paid Oct. salary, says minister

    Workers must be paid Oct. salary, says minister

    Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Mallam Muha-mmad Bello has instructed the chairmen of the six area councils to use their federal allocations to clear workers’ October salary arrears.

    Bello gave the directive after the FCT Joint Account Allocation Committee (JAAC) meeting where the sum of N1, 464,071,850.48 was shared among the six area councils.

    In a press statement, the Deputy Director/Chief Press Secretary FCT, Muhammad Sule said the minister had instructed the chairmen not to allow any member of staff to suffer unduly.

    He said: “The minister gave the directive after the FCT Joint Account Allocation Committee (JAAC) meeting where the sum of N1, 464,071,850.48 was shared among the six area councils of the Federal Capital Territory being monies accruing to them from the Federation Account for the month of October.

    “This is sequel to the Federation Account Allocation Committee meeting for the month of October, 2015 which was held on November 27 and 28, this year.

    “Malam Bello advised the chairmen to ensure that no member of staff is allowed to

    suffer unduly; stressing that staff salaries are expected to be paid as at when due.

    “The minister warned that the allocation was not meant for the award of contracts but for payment of salaries owed to workers of the area councils.

    “Henceforth, all allocations to the area councils will be published in Abuja Digest, a weekly publication of the FCT Administration for all stakeholders to see in line with the change mantra of this government.

    “The minister, however, urged the workers to be patient, as efforts would be made to ensure that their November and December salaries are paid on time.

    “On sanitation, the minister appealed to officials of the FCT Administration in charge of environmental issues to devise ways of sustaining the present efforts.

    “He instructed such departments and agencies to sensitise residents to the need of keeping their environment clean and desist from disposing garbage indiscriminately.”

  • OOU lecturers protest unpaid salary

    OOU lecturers protest unpaid salary

    Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) teachers yesterday marched on the Itamerin-Igan Road in Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State.

    They were protesting under-funding of the institution and non-payment of their 16-month arrears by the government.

    The lecturers decried poor funding, infrastructural decay, empty laboratories and libraries as well as increasing salary arrears owed them.

    Protesting under the aegis of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), OOU Branch, the lecturers said they had wrritten to Governor Ibikunle Amosun, the Governing Council and the management.

    They carried placards, some of which read: “Governor Amosun should properly fund OOU. It is a statutory responsibility”; “Funding OOU should be made a first line charge. It is the first among equals”; “Depending on IGR to fund OOU is an act of gross irresponsibility on the part of state government”; “Education is not a commercial venture, it is a social investment” and “Amosun, don’t destroy the little consolidation Saburi has achieved through TETFUND”, among others.

    ASUU Chairman Dr. Deji Agboola said the lecturers might embark on an indefinite strike since the government would not reason with them.

    Agboola said the strike would be “total, comprehensive and indefinite”.

    He said their demands included reversal of the precarious funding situation at OOU and taking over of the payment of full staff salary to free the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) for academic and infrastructural development.

    The ASUU chairman also said the lecturers wanted an end to the quality decline at OOU by instituting a reliable funding structure and release of fund for Earned Academic Allowances.

    His words: “One prominent way in which the government has been cutting back on funding is the non-payment of full salary of staff and removal from subvention head.

    “We have written several letters to the council and the Visitor to this effect. Public education is a social good.

    “Government currently pays about half of the full salary of staff at OOU. To make matters worse, the so-called salaries are placed under the  subvention heading; a misleading heading which could be misinterpreted as grant meant for research and development of the university.

    “Government also pretends that it does not know that this half of full salaries of staff is the subvention sent to the university. In short, the government has failed to send the supposed subvention to the university for 16 months. What a shame,” Agboola said.

    The Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, Mrs. Modupe Mujota, could not be reached for comments.

    But Governor Ibikunle Amosun had said there was no magic his administration could do now about the funding challenges of the state-owned tertiary institutions.

    At the stakeholders’ meeting in Abeokuta, the state capital, in respect of the 2016 budget, Amosun said when the state’s financial fortunes improves, he would address the needs of tertiary education.

  • NASU warns states over salary arrears

    NASU warns states over salary arrears

    •Threatens showdown

    Governors still owing workers, despite the bailout funds from the Federal Government, may soon face an industrial action. The Non Academic Staff of Universities and Educational Institutions (NASU) has urged the governors to pay up with immediate effect.

    The union in a resolution adopted after the quadrennial delegates’ conference, last  weekend, warned that the bailout funds should be used to pay the arrears of salaries owed workers. It also mandated the governors to, henceforth, ensure effective and prompt payment of workers’ salaries.

    The statement, which was jointly signed by the Deputy President  and Secretary,  Adegoke Adeniyi and Damola Adelekuný, condemned the delay in the payment of workers’ salaries by some governors.

    “Union views this negative, anti-worker agenda as an inhuman act, which has brought untold hardship on the workers and invariably on the populace,” the statement said.

    It, however, praised the giant strides of President Muhammad Buhari in providing bailout funds to affected states to offset debts owed to workers, noting that the singular act of Mr. President has endeared him to the hearts of Nigerian workers.

    The union also urged workers of the affected states not to compromise the payment and to closely monitor the disbursement of the funds to forestall any attempt by some governors to use the funds for other purposes.

    The union also expressed dismay on the deplorable conditions of Nigerian Public Libraries and the National Library of Nigeria due to neglect by government and decline in individual and corporate support.

    It also frowned at some governors’ concession of e-library to private operators and other ministries as against its usage by the library boards.

    It noted that for the country to develop and for the present government’s clamour for eradication of illiteracy to succeed, urgent attention must be given to resuscitation of libraries in Nigeria.

    “The Conference-in-Session, therefore, called on all tiers of government to make it a priority by providing adequate funds for this education sector since they are not created to generate revenue but to render services to the populace and also implored the Tertiary Education Fund (TETFUND) to intervene in the pathetic situation in public libraries”, the union added.

  • Fed Govt set to pay workers’ salary arrears, allowances

    Fed Govt set to pay workers’ salary arrears, allowances

    The Secretary-General , Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria (ASCSN), Comrade Alade Bashir Lawal, has said the Federal Government is planning to pay workers salary arrears and allowances.

    In a statement issued on Monday, Comrade Lawal, who is also a member of the Presidency’s Panel on Bailout for Federal Public Servants, said the outstanding benefits owed thousands of public servants would be paid soon.

    He said the benefits included salary arrears, promotion arrears, first 28th days allowance on transfer from post, repatriation allowance and allowance for mandatory training organised by the Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation (OHCSF) in 2010.

    He said the union had written series of letters to President Muhammadu Buhari as President-elect and since he assumed office on May 29, intimating him of the outstanding salaries and allowances.

    Following this, he said, the President on September 14, through the OHCSF ordered MDAs to compile names of affected officers within seven days.

    “Members of the Committee that worked on the salary arrears issue were drawn mainly from the Federal Ministry of Finance, Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Federal Ministry of Labour and Productivity and ASCSN,” he added.

    The ASCSN scribe explained that the Committee had pleaded with the Presidency to accept as supplementary the list from few other MDAs that could not meet the seven-day deadline for the submission of names of affected officers.

    He added that a memorandum was  forwarded to the President on the completion of the assignment on bailout for public servants in the MDAs.

    “We must also express gratitude to the Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Labour and Productivity, Dr Cement Illoh, the Chairman of the Panel, for the able manner he steered the affairs of the Committee.

    “In particular, our special thanks also go to President Buhari for directing the compilation of the arrears and allowances of the Federal workers. We urge him to continue to play his fatherly role by directing the release of needed funds so that these outstanding salaries and allowances can be paid in the next few weeks in order to put the entire sordid story behind us,” he said.

  • Aspirant to donate half of salary to charity

    The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and aspirant of the forthcoming chairmanship election in Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC), Hon. Abdulahi Candido has said he will donate 50 per cent of his monthly salary to charity if he wins election.

    He also promised to establish a local AMAC radio station that would focus on tradition,  cultural heritage, occupation and other vital aspect of the people in the territory, saying that the radio station would serve as a united force for the people of AMAC and Abuja at large.

    “AMAC is a very large council and the radio stations around do not really speak directly to the people. So, as a local council that operates within the locality,  our intention is to come out with a local radio station that can speak directly to the people in their mother tongues.

    “Different languages ranging from Igbo, Yoruba, Gbagyi, Gwandara, Hausa and other languages, would be concentrated on the radio production. That is the idea of coming out with a local radio station that will speak directly to the people outside what we have now.  When you bring a station that is grassroots oriented, it will affect the lives of the people directly,” he said

    Candido added that if elected his administration will establish skills acquisition and vocational centres in the 12 wards, where school leavers and unemployed graduates will be trained free of charge in different kinds of trade.

    “This is aimed at making the people self reliant and also job providers. A special unit will be charged with the responsibilities of finding jobs in Ministries,  Departments and Agencies (MDAs),  companies will also be approached with a view to ensure that AMAC quota is not short-changed.

    “While private companies that operate operates in our localities will be encouraged to provide their host communities with jobs. The council will enforce laws that will compel compliance, so that our younger ones are kept off the streets,” he said.

     

  • Bailout: Group seeks salary priority

    The association of Southeast House of Assembly Candidates under the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the just concluded 2015 elections has urged all the state governors in the zone to use the bailout fund released last week by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to pay accrued workers salary.

    The CBN would this week release about N338billion to 23 states including 4 other states of Abia (N14.152b), Ebonyi (N4.063billion), Enugu (N4.207billion) and Imo (N26.806billion) respectively.

    The leader of the group, Comrade James Chibuzo Chikwendu speaking in Aba, the Abia State commercial city said that it was important that the state southeast governors should pay their workers their salary arrears after they had worked tirelessly for their respective states.

    He however warned against the diversion of such funds on other projects which the fund was not meant for, adding that such moves would mean yielding to the temptation of misappropriating and diverting the fund for the purpose for which it was meant for.

    “We commend the presidency’s prompt release of funds to the troubled state governments in Nigeria and urge them to use the fund judiciously. As it is a right steps in the right direction which has the backing of law.

    “We implore state governors to ensure that they pay workers and pensioners, owed arrears of salaries and gratuities, and resist any temptation of misappropriation or diversion of the fund”.

    Chikwendu also commended the President Muhammadu Buhari and his Vice Yemi Osinbajo for recently slashing their salaries by 50percent, adding that it doesn’t only show their level of patriotism but has shown that they were willing to save the country from economic wastages and urge other political office holders to emulate the steps taken by the Buhari and Osinbajo.

    According to the leader of the group, “We commend the government of President Muhammadu Buhari for his ability in curtailing the excesses of the Boko Haram Sect in the Northeast and we urge the federal government to bring on board a workable formula to solve the insecurity situation in the country.

    “Though it is now clear that insurgency is almost witnessed in all parts of the world, the present administration has taken a bold step following the recent appointment of service chiefs which we believe the team is for the total annihilation of the insurgency rocking the country, Mr. President’s trip to USA soliciting for support is also part of his commitment to tackle insurgency and recovery of looted funds by former political office holders. We are confident in Mr. President’s assurances to Nigerians that he will not spare anybody who steals public fund even it they are members of the ruling party. It is also a right step in the right direction and we commend him for sticking to fight corruption”, the group stated.

    While promising their unflinching support for the president however assured that they stood behind the aspirations of the party to capture the southeast in 2019.

  • Oyo begins payment of salary arrears

    Civil servants in Oyo State have started collecting their outstanding four-month salary arrears.

    A socio-political group, the Ajumose Coalition Movement (ACM), praised Governor Abiola Ajimobi for paying the outstanding salaries with the bail-out loan.

    The group, in a statement by its Chairman Wasiu Olatunbosun in Ibadan yesterday, said Ajimobi’s resolve was a mark of his concern for workers’ welfare.

    Ajimobi had, on Monday, assured that the loan would not be diverted.

    “Notwithstanding the inability of the Ajimobi administration to continue with its tradition of prompt payment of salaries and allowance, the regret and concern which the governor demonstrated while the problem lingered was rare and commendable.

    “Ajimobi stood firmly by the workers and ensured that the situation did not get out of hand as was almost the case in some other states. The governor brought his virtue of prudence as well as administrative and managerial acumen to bear.”

     

  • Beyond salary and bailout in Osun

    SIR: Those who thought that the salary palaver in Osun and other states owing workers will disappear with the bailout funds should have a rethink because it will not. Workers and pensioners have been restless for the past one week, expecting to be paid the bailout received recently.

    The governor, however, has insisted that payment would be made only after the completion of the verification exercise. True, physical verification has ended but the result is still being collated and the report yet to be submitted, which should form the basis of the new wage bill.

    I agree with the governor that ghost workers should not receive the jumbo pay. From investigation, it has been found out that the beneficiaries of payroll fraud in cooperation with the opposition PDP have been blackmailing the governor to heat up Osun and incite workers against the governor.

    Secondly, it was the workers themselves who asked for the verification exercise after disputing the N3.6 billion wage bill the government claims it pays every month, it was never the governor’s idea.

    A lot of misinformation has been going on and many innocent workers have been deceived. The N34.9billion bailout received from Abuja represents three values. The first is for salaries for February to June 2015, the second is for pensions covering the same period while the third is for the completion of specific projects, ongoing or new. These funds are not transferable. So it is not true that all the N34.9 billion is for paying salaries and pensions arrears.

    The question which has engaged the governor and for which he has proposed half salary for senior staff is what happens after June? Given the dwindling oil receipt and N2.3 billion allocation from Abuja for July, what will be the state of Osun’s finances after the deductions for the bailout loan kicks in? It simply means that Osun’s allocation will be less than N1billion. So where do we go from here? Should we eat everything now and go hungry later or spread what we have to last us longer?

    While we still debate this, this is the moment of clarity for the governor and I daresay the workers too. The present wage bill of N3.6b is unsustainable; something must give.

    The governor must reduce the wages and pensions bill in the state to a maximum of N1.8 billion. The current workforce of 35,000 is too large and unsustainable. There must be a shift in the anti-development thinking that makes people to say that Osun is a civil service state, or the civil service is the only industry in Osun. This type of thinking will lead to nowhere. The civil service is an instrument of service delivery and not an end in itself. On no account must the government spend more than 40 per cent of the state’s resources running government. This takes courage.

    If it were in the private sector, the workforce would have been right sized as back as 2013 when allocation fell from N4.6 billion to N2.6 billion and nobody would be accusing the governor of owing workers eight months salary.

    The governor keeps giving assurances that he will not lay off workers. This amounts to living in denial. The bottom line is that he must live within his means. Therefore, he must be prepared to right-size and cut down on wages, especially of the top civil servants who gulp most of the wages or continue to pile up debts and crisis. May God give him the courage to do what is needed.

     

    • Mike Ogundele,

    Osogbo, Osun State

     

  • Osun, after the salary demon

    After a stream of cheery developmental news, the Osun opposition, with both hands, grabbed the demon of unpaid salaries — and hard, it nailed the Osun government.

    It thoroughly demonised Governor Rauf Aregbesola and his ambitious social and physical infrastructure programmes, donning the Ogbeni in an unflattering garb — a grand hypocrite in the progressive space, that should be condemned by all!

    Which lover of the masses, they ask in triumph, cheeks bathed in subversive tears, would sit pretty and watch his people go hungry, months on end, without salaries?

    It was all emotive blackmail, of course.  On the salary issue, the governor was not unfazed any more than he created the failure, though his finances were rather tight, with virtually every kobo over-leveraged, on ambitious — over-ambitious, many insist — capital projects, such that any shock, no matter how slight, was catastrophic.

    The real culprit was, however, former President Goodluck Jonathan — his recklessness with the national till. This point Ripples made in “Osun’s politics of the belly” (July 7), when it argued that since the Jonathan Presidency caused the problem, the Muhammadu Buhari Presidency should fix it, instead of the media roasting of victim governors, which solved no problems.  The president did just that.

    But the blackmail grandly resonated.  Those unconvinced by its logic were easily swept by its pathos; with not a few succumbing fast to plaintive kith-and-kin, going hungry and clearly angry, for not earning salary, for no less than six months.

    Well, all is fair in war — and the Osun government, in the clouds most times, plummeted back to earth!

    Now, with a Federal Government-secured loan to clear the salary backlog, is the demonization set to end?  Not a chance!

    For one, play on emotions is the exclusive preserve of those who cannot build clinical arguments; or the mischievous, who have nary a case.

    For another, the Osun opposition is not about dismantling its egbirin ote — what the Yoruba would call a complex web of intrigues — for in Aregbesola’s failure lies their own salvation!  When, after all, comes from the gods, another potent blackmail weapon, ala unpaid salaries, to torture a clear and present nemesis?

    So, enter a fresh controversy: the reported verification, in the build-up to clearing the salary arrears.

    The Osun opposition insists it is yet another example of the government’s coldness to the plight of the Osun workers — for why is the verification bobbing up “now”, on the virtual eve of settling what was owed?  Some especially creative minds even posit, swearing by all they hold dear, that the government had “fixed” the salary money to earn some “quick interest”, while workers continued starving!

    To be sure, the government has not exactly done itself much favour by the verification’s timing, with its high blackmail value: its opponents’ penchant for eternal spinning; and a jaded workers’ near-zero resistance to emotional manipulation, masquerading as hot sympathy.

    Still, the government insists that since Osun would continue re-paying the loan far into the future, it was an excellent time to vet the salary bill, lest the money ends in some ghost pockets.  That makes a lot of sense, though not a few would be too angry to see reason with it.

    It could also well be that a few ghosts and their ambassadors are the most trenchant in the protest racket — for the more raucous the racket, the more the confusion; and the more the confusion, the better chances the ghosts continue to get paid!

    Whatever is happening, the Ogbeni owes the Osun people clear explanations and full disclosure.  At the end, the government would do what it must do to protect public money and its own integrity.

    So, with the opposition always buzzing with mischief, of the most fantastic hue, it may be morning yet on Osun’s day of eternal intrigue!

    Still, the Osun government must be gratified it continues to point the way, for the rest of the country, to the welfare state; despite its lean resources.  Two policy news appear to reinforce this point.

    Two weeks ago, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo announced the Federal Government was set to implement the All Progressives Congress (APC) campaign promise of a schools feeding programme, which, apart from boosting school attendance, would also boost investment in agriculture, catering and allied lines.

    On September 9 in Osogbo, as the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) kicked off its nationwide distribution of plastic chairs to schools, a Federal Government official confirmed Osun’s leadership in this schools welfare programme.

    “The home-grown school feeding programme, the O’Meal,” said UBEC’s Dr. Yakubu Gambo, “is one programme that has endeared the governor to us because he is the only governor doing it despite the capital intensive nature of the programme.”

    Governor Aregbesola, present at the occasion, weighed in: “We are building state-of-the-art 100 elementary schools, 50 middle schools and 20 high schools.  This is a big project by any standard,” he gushed, “which has injected life into the construction industry; and has provided jobs for artisans and professionals.”

    Prince Felix Awofisayo, the Osun SUBEB chief, was not left out of the developmental whoop: “Let me reiterate that the provision of functional education for the citizenry,” he declared, “as the administration is anchored on the implementation of a cohesive and an all-encompassing six-point integral plan.”

    So much developmental news in a day — a far cry from rumbling tummies, plotting adversaries and scapegoating media, just as it was at the beginning, before the salary demon!

    It is the final triumph, then?  Hardly!

    ‘Governor Aregbesola needs a cabinet now to finish as strongly as he started, before the salary catastrophe.  If he delays, he risks facing a crisis — an internal crisis — much more lethal than the hell-raising Osun opposition can ever muster’

    And the battle next time would not be solely from the Osun opposition, even if its bad-tempered buzz would always vibrate; but more dangerously from inside Aregbesola’s own camp, which may well, not unfairly, declare itself starved of legitimate pork.

    Thank God, the salary odyssey is coming to an end.  The Ogbeni should draw a closure as swiftly as he can, and bring smiles back to the cheeks of Osun workers.  He should also seek funds to complete his grand capital projects, among them crucial roads.  It is nice developmental news, from Osun, is hitting the wires again, after the horror tales of the past months.

    But the come-back would not be complete without the governor constituting a cabinet. Nearing the end of the first year in a four-year second term, it is time to bring in as many bright and committed minds as possible — for it is a challenging juncture, demanding a brilliant and committed collective.  It could make the difference between success and failure.

    Governor Aregbesola needs a cabinet now to finish as strongly as he started, before the interregnum of the salary catastrophe.  If he delays, he risks facing a crisis — an internal crisis — much more lethal than the hell-raising Osun opposition can ever muster.

  • Don decries salary disparity

    Except the huge disparity between incomes of political office holders and civil/public servants in Nigeria is corrected, the problem of crime may not be in sight, a Professor of Criminology at the Ibrahim Badamasi University (IBBU), Lapai Professor Eddiefloyd Igbo has said.

    Igbo, of Department of Sociology, said this while delivering the institution’s fourth Inaugural Lecture titled: “Addressing Crime and Insecurity in Nigeria”.

    He noted that huge disproportionate incomes encourage crime and deviance among those who feel deprived, disadvantaged or cheated, thereby dampening their overall morale and commitment to work.

    He said crime and insecurity flourish in Nigeria because the executive, legislature and judiciary as well as the police have not been accountable in playing their respective statutory roles in the fight against crime and security in Nigeria.