Tag: workers

  • Workers demand new salary scale implementation

    Workers demand new salary scale implementation

    Workers of the Federal Polytechnic in Ado Ekiti protested against management for alleged non-implementation of a new salary scale.

    The protest, which started at about 6 am lasted till about noon. The workers accused management of fraud and called on the Federal Ministry of Education to investigate the allegation.

    The workers blocked the main gate and prevented movement into the campus.

    The action was carried out under the auspices of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Polytechnics (SSANIP) and Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU).

    The protesters said they won’t resume work until they are paid. They urged the management led by the Rector, Dr. Taiwo Akande, to place them on the same level with their counterparts in Federal Polytechnics in Ilaro, Idah, Ile Oluji, Auchi, Unwana and Yaba.

    Led by ASUP Chairman Tunji Owoeye, the workers who carried placards and chanted solidarity songs, said the sanitations’s academic staff were still on Consolidated Tertiary Institutions Salary Scale (CONTISS) 7 instead of CONTISS 8 as approved by the Federal Government.

    Students also joined the protest – complaining about what they called obnoxious charges.

    Owoeye said: “We have taken steps. We have met the management several times about this. We have written letters of warning to the management to implement this as is done in other federal polytechnics.

    “We have given 21 days notice, 14 days notice without any move by the management. We have also written our national body. In fact, let me tell you, that my own national body has given approval that by the end of 14 day ultimatum from now, we should have the institution closed down and go back home.”

    Reacting, the Deputy Registrar (Information and Public Relations), Ade Adeyemi-Adejolu said:  “Very sorry that I’m not in a position to talk to you or any of our other colleagues on the protest. Government had forbidden us from externalising the issue. Thanks.”

  • Unity Bank sacks 215 workers

    Unity Bank sacks 215 workers

    Unity Bank Plc yesterday reduced its over 2,000  workforce by sacking 215 members of staff, it was reliably learnt.

    The exercise, it was further leant, was to enable the lender realign its operation and pursue a long term growth strategy.

    Some of the  downsized staff members were said to have opted to resign while management approved severance package for them in line with the bank’s policy.

    The lender last May, forged a strategic alliance with Black Trituium, equity and investment fund manager.

    The bank said it in a report on its website that it was driven by the vision to be the retail bank of choice for all Nigerians and “this is at the core of all that we do”.

    Investigation revealed that the affected members of staff were those that achieved less than 40 per cent of their performance target, which affected the lender’s overall profitability in recent years.

    The downsizing, which cut across all cadres including junior, middle and top management positions, happened at a time majority of banks are battling with poor profitability over harsh economic conditions and heightened business risks from the  plunge in crude oil prices.

    The bank is also said to have attracted specialist skills to its workforce since the relocation of its head office from Abuja to Lagos, which was in line with its plan to grow market share in viable clusters of the retail market.

    A source close to the bank said the new focus of the business has led to significant enhancement of human capital in its various business units.

    This was with a view to injecting fresh ideas, initiatives and energies to strengthen its various departments with capabilities to pursue the attainment of strategic business focus in the Agricultural financing, retail/Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and development of rural economy.

    It bank, it was further leant, recently hired about 200 new staff to drive the transformation initiative while about 100 other staff were said to have been promoted.

    Commenting on this development, an industry expert asserted that these exercises are part of the hard choices that forward-looking organisations desiring optimum performance had to take from time to time to enable it deliver consistently on shareholders expectations.

    In the report on its website, the lender said it was one of Nigeria’s leading retail banks with 240 business offices spread across the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory. “We are Nigeria’s seventh largest bank by business locations,” it said.

    The Nation learnt  that the new investor in the bank, Black Trituium, was committed to making significant equity investment in the bank.

    This strategic alliance will expand Unity Bank’s business scope, strengthen its capital base and support the bank’s retail strategy while meeting the investment objectives of Black Trituium. The Black Trituium manages funds for individuals and institutions such as Trade Union Congress (TUC).

    The collaboration with the bank is expected to expand the retail and Small and Medium Enterprises segment of the bank. Investment analysts see this as a unique opportunity with the potential of broadening the bank’s customer base and provide long term stakeholders value.

    Furthermore, given the current economic outlook, this strategic alliance will come with immediate benefits that will enhance the capacity of the bank to meet the needs of its banking public.The alliance will also support government’s initiatives aimed at driving growth in the real sector through Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and retail products,  with particular focus on the agricultural sector.

    Unity Bank commenced operations in January 2006 following the merger of nine financial institutions with competences in investment, corporate and retail banking.

  • Workers lament wage arrears

    Alarmed by the suffering of Nigerians, particularly civil servants, in the past few months, organised labour, under the auspices of the Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria (ASCSN), has urged the Federal Government to pay federal civil servants their outstanding salaries and allowances to stimulate the economy.

    In a statement issued in Lagos, ASCSN Secretary-General Comrade Alade Bashir Lawal said if the Federal Government should pay salary arrears and allowances, including promotion arrears owed civil servants, their purchasing power would increase.

    “This is the right time to act.  The government should, therefore, not

    waste the opportunity. We believe that since these federal civil servants and their dependants live in different parts of the country, if these outstanding entitlements are paid to them, it will have positive ripple effects on the economy and douse the tension in the land.

    “There is anger and hunger in the country and as a patriotic trade union organisation, we have decided to bring this deplorable situation to the notice of government so that it can take necessary measures to stem the tide by doing the needful,” the union stressed.

    The union wondered why the Federal Government, which gave N713.7 billion to states to pay arrears of salaries and allowances of  workers, could not settle the debt owed its employees, even when a committee it set up to compute the liabilities submitted its report to the Presidency more than 10 months ago.

    ASCSN lamented that a bag of rice is now sold for between N19,000 to N20,000, more than the N18,000 monthly National Minimum Wage; a gallon of kerosine costs N1,200, from about N400 few months ago, while the price of petrol was increased from N87.50 to N145 per litre.

    “Generally, while the cost of goods and services has continued to rise astronomically, salaries of workers have remained static and these are  not even paid in some states for the past six months.

    “Since the welfare of the people is the main reason why government exists, we wish to advise that the Federal Government should look beyond political party affiliation and other primordial affinity and assemble patriotic experts, who abound in Nigeria, to chart the way forward for the economy,” the Union said.

  • Katsina to hire 600 workers

    Katsina State Governor Aminu Bello Masari has said the state needs a teaching hospital to serve its university and offer courses in medical services.

    Masari, who spoke with reporters on his two-week business trip to China and India, added that over 600 workers will be recruited in the health facilities already in place.

  • Electricity workers, others protest poor power services

    Electricity workers, others protest poor power services

    Members of civil society, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and workers under the umbrella organisation, National Union of Electricity Employees have protested the shortfall in administration and services of the Enugu Electricity Distribution Company (EEDC) in Aba, the commercial nerve of Abia State.

    Consumers of electricity in Aba and its environs have been crying out over the arbitrary increase of electricity bills, irregular power supply and estimated bills. Some EEDC staff said they are understaffed, necessitating the engagement of casual workers.

    The protesters displayed placards, some of which read, “EEDC should provide electricity supply for its customers; EEDC should provide customers with pre-paid meters; Stop arbitrary sack of workers; NUEE say No to casualisation; NUEE say No to EEDC High-handedness; Stop giving customers estimated bills”.

    Some of the protesters including Mr. Ossy Abangwu, chairman, National Union of Electricity Employee (NUEE) in the state, and a national officer of the union, Mr. Tony Ndubuisi told our reporter on the EEDC premises that they were protesting what they described as “anti-labour policies and inhuman workers treatment policy of the EEDC.”

    Ndubuisi said, “In addition to the anti-labour policies of EEDC and inhuman treatment working conditions in which the workers have been subjected to, which includes arbitrary sack of workers as if we are not working or as if we are in slave labour and we say no.

    “This is not how people should work in their own country, there should be dignity in labour. People should be punished or sacked when they commit an offence that warrants sack, the country has labour laws and the labour laws of Nigeria should be followed by the EEDC; that is our point. The National Union of Electricity Employees is saying that they should follow and obey the labour laws of the country.”

    Continuing, Ndubuisi who accused the management of the EEDC of failing to use professionals, said “We say no to load rejections…EEDC refuses to pick loads and when you refuse to do so you suffer the masses, we say no to it. When there is load, the electrical facility will be busy which will also need manpower and this will create employment to the unemployed. We are telling the EEDC to pick loads so that their workers will  have work to do.”

    Abangwu corroborating Ndubuisi added “There are cases of sack even as I am speaking. Lists are being compiled on a daily basis and people are losing their job everyday. Someone can be sacked without any reason even by mere gossip which is very wrong to sack workers based on mere gossip or allegation. It is also not every misconduct that should attract sack. These are what we are saying no to, because we don’t have to work and be treated like slaves in our own country. We are protesting so that the management will change this attitude because it looks as if we are working under threat and fear.

    “We are also protesting the absence of pre-paid meters by EEDC; the federal government has said that the distribution companies should give customers pre-paid meters so that you only collect money for services you render. But it has been recorded that when you are going about, EEDC is also going out to collect money from people for services they do not render, using a system that everybody has discredited called estimated billing and crazy billing, and this is why workers are sacked often.

  • No work, no pay, varsity warns workers

    Vice Chancellor (VC) of the University of Agriculture, Makurdi (UAM), Prof Emmanuel Kucha, has warned striking unions in the university of the Federal Government’s policy of “No Work no pay” policy.

    The Joint Action Committee (JAC) of the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), the Non Academic Staff Union (NASU) and the National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) of the university have been on an indefinite strike to demand for the immediate implementation of all components  of earned allowances.

    The strike started last week after the expiration of a 21-day ultimatum.

    Leaders of the unions turned back all non-academic and senior members of staff that showed up for work from the gate.

    Most of the offices were locked to enforce compliance with the strike.

    At the Vice chancellor’s office, which also houses the Registrar, Bursar, and General Administration, no worker was seen on duty.

    A page of the bulletin of the UAM, signed by the Registrar, Mrs Helen Nyitse the university administration cited a circular from the Executive Secretary of the National University Commission (NUC) dated  13th July, 2016, where the VC stated that he has been directed to strictly implement the “No Work, No pay“, rule as contained in section 43 of  the Trade Dispute Act Cap T 8, laws of the federation of Nigeria 2004.

    The circular advised all staff of the university to be mindful of the consequence of participating in any strike which will disrupt the service of the university.

  • Will workers still get wage increase?

    SIR: Nigerian workers were excited when the Federal Government announced that it had constituted a committee to come up with proposals on a new minimum wage and palliatives that would cushion the effects of the recent hike in the price of fuel. Unfortunately, the excitement appears to be waning by the day because not much has been heard of what the committee is doing, or has so far done.

    We recall that the Federal Government and the Nigeria Labour Congress set up a national committee to work out palliative measures and fashion out a new minimum wage that would ameliorate the impact of the increase in the pump price of the premium motor spirit (petrol). Not long after the committee was constituted, there were conflicting media reports on its activities. Initially, it was alleged that the committee had started sitting, but NLC denied that the committee had truly started meeting, saying the Federal Government was yet to constitute the committee.

    Both the NLC and the Trade Union Congress (TUC), the two central labour organisations in the nation had proposed N56,000 as the new national minimum wage as against the current N18,000, which had been in operation since 2011. There is every justification for an upward review of the minimum wage following the increase in the pump price because the adjustment has worsened the plight of workers such that their purchasing power has drastically reduced. Infact, for an average public servant of today, good life can be described as an unaffordable luxury.

    Those who are against the proposal had argued that the labour’s demand for a wage increase is unsustainable on account of the deplorable and prevailing economic situation in the country coupled with the sharp fall in the price of crude oil at the international market. This slide has culminated into the inability of most state governors to pay workers’ salaries and meet other official obligations. To date, many state governments still owe salary arrears up to seven months or more. The Federal Government recently declared 27 states bankrupt, stating that they were ‘incapable’ of paying salaries and maintaining ‘efficient’ and unhindered daily government operations, a position affirmed by the chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, AbdulazeezYari of Zamfara State.

    The questions to ask are: Is it really feasible to increase the minimum wage payable to Nigerian workers? Is this realistic for both the federal and state governments to implement? While the case of the Federal Government seems to be feasible, state governors could also achieve it by borrowing a leaf from the recent example shown by Governor Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State, who has increased the state’s minimum wage to N25,000. Similarly, despite the cash crunch being experienced, workers’ salaries are still regularly being paid by the Cross River State government. Governor Ben Ayade-led administration’s prudent fiscal management is worthy of emulation, despite the fact that the state’s earning has nosedived since the hitherto 13 per cent derivation from its oil wells had been ceded to Akwa Ibom State, following a Supreme Court judgment.

    Another governor that could be a reference point is Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State. It is remarkable to note that Lagos State has already surpassed its first quarter internally-generated revenue target with the over N100 billion gross earning, as many states remain beggarly by rushing to Abuja for the monthly dole and reliance on bail-out funds.

    The Federal Government should let Nigerians know how far the committee has gone in the provision on the blueprint on the palliatives and evolving of a living and sustainable minimum wage for workers. By that, the government would not only be sending the right signals that accountability is key to responsive governance; it is also shows clear commitment and sensitivity to workers’ agitation. This is the right way to go!

     

    Adewale Kupoluyi,

    Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta.

  • Electricity workers, others protest poor power services

    Electricity workers, others protest poor power services

    Members of civil society, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and workers under the umbrella organisation, National Union of Electricity Employees have protested the shortfall in administration and services of the Enugu Electricity Distribution Company (EEDC) in Aba, the commercial nerve of Abia State.

    Consumers of electricity in Aba and its environs have been crying out over the arbitrary increase of electricity bills, irregular power supply and estimated bills. Some EEDC staff said they are understaffed, necessitating the engagement of casual workers.

    The protesters displayed placards, some of which read, “EEDC should provide electricity supply for its customers; EEDC should provide customers with pre-paid meters; Stop arbitrary sack of workers; NUEE say No to casualisation; NUEE say No to EEDC High-handedness; Stop giving customers estimated bills”.

    Some of the protesters including Mr. Ossy Abangwu, chairman, National Union of Electricity Employee (NUEE) in the state, and a national officer of the union, Mr. Tony Ndubuisi told our reporter on the EEDC premises that they were protesting what they described as “anti-labour policies and inhuman workers treatment policy of the EEDC.”

    Ndubuisi said, “In addition to the anti-labour policies of EEDC and inhuman treatment working conditions in which the workers have been subjected to, which includes arbitrary sack of workers as if we are not working or as if we are in slave labour and we say no.

    “This is not how people should work in their own country, there should be dignity in labour. People should be punished or sacked when they commit an offence that warrants sack, the country has labour laws and the labour laws of Nigeria should be followed by the EEDC; that is our point. The National Union of Electricity Employees is saying that they should follow and obey the labour laws of the country.”

    Continuing, Ndubuisi who accused the management of the EEDC of failing to use professionals, said “We say no to load rejections…EEDC refuses to pick loads and when you refuse to do so you suffer the masses, we say no to it. When there is load, the electrical facility will be busy which will also need manpower and this will create employment to the unemployed. We are telling the EEDC to pick loads so that their workers will  have work to do.”

    Abangwu corroborating Ndubuisi added “There are cases of sack even as I am speaking. Lists are being compiled on a daily basis and people are losing their job everyday. Someone can be sacked without any reason even by mere gossip which is very wrong to sack workers based on mere gossip or allegation. It is also not every misconduct that should attract sack. These are what we are saying no to, because we don’t have to work and be treated like slaves in our own country. We are protesting so that the management will change this attitude because it looks as if we are working under threat and fear.

    “We are also protesting the absence of pre-paid meters by EEDC; the federal government has said that the distribution companies should give customers pre-paid meters so that you only collect money for services you render. But it has been recorded that when you are going about, EEDC is also going out to collect money from people for services they do not render, using a system that everybody has discredited called estimated billing and crazy billing, and this is why workers are sacked often.

  • Kogi battles ghost workers

    Kogi battles ghost workers

    Kogi State has uncovered over 25,000 ghost workers, and vows to fish out more, reports JOSEPH JIBUEZE

    Over 25,000 ghost workers in Kogi State have met their tether’s end. Some of these dubious elements were said to have been defrauding the state for as long as 10 years. Now the state, in an ambitious move, has ensured that they no longer drain the resources of the state.

    The ghost-worker menace is a nationwide malaise, which President Muhammadu Buhari wants the Continuous Audit Team to tackle, alongside overpayment of allowances and outright embezzlement.

    In June, the team found discrepancies in the payroll of ministries, departments and agencies, which cost the Federal Government about N5.7billion monthly.

    Its head, Mohammed Dikwa, said the team has helped save about N50billion, adding that over 43,000 ghost workers have been struck off the payroll.

    Most states are also affected. For instance, Plateau uncovered 5,000 ghost workers recently, while Sokoto uncovered 12,915 two weeks ago. With resources getting leaner and federal allocations dwindling, resulting in inability to pay salaries, more states are embarking on staff audit to eliminate fraudulent salary earners.

    On assumption of office, Governor Yahaya Bello, in line with his civil service reform policy, set up the Staff Verification and Screening Committee on February 22.

    Its mandate was to ascertain the true position of the state and local government workforce with a view to optimising Kogi’s human and financial resources for development.

    The committee’s leadership was later reshuffled following reports that it was sabotaging the exercise. A backup committee was further set up on May 24 and tasked with supporting the main committee to restore discipline, integrity and transparency to the screening exercise. On June 22, the committee submitted its report to the governor.

    It uncovered 25,103 ghost workers, as well as cases of impersonation of dead workers by staff who earned the deceased’s salaries.

    The report, presented to Governor Bello by the Auditor-General, Alhaji Usman Yusuf Okala, says those on the state’s payroll have been reduced following the exercise.

     

    The findings

    According to the report, as at February 22, the state had 88, 973 staff on its nominal payroll, with a monthly wage bill of N5,809,578,703. At the conclusion of the exercise on July 24, the cleared and validated workforce was 63,870.

    The 25,103 staff included unintended beneficiaries who had been drawing salaries fraudulently from the state and Local Government finances. “The estimated current monthly wage bills of cleared and validated workforce after the conclusion of our report was N4,443,070,644,” Okala said.

    According to him, the state lost over N213billion in the last 13 years to ghost workers but would save over N1.4billion on a monthly basis, which would have gone to ghost workers, thanks to the verification.  “These savings will amount to N16,387,296,713.88 per annum,” he added.

    On cases of impersonation, the report says: “These are set of dubious and notorious people who are claiming the employment benefits (salary & allowances) of some deceased civil servants of the state and Local Governments for as far back as 10 years.

    “Unfortunately, no single civil servant has raised alarm to put a stop to this practice, hence aiding and abetting the financial crime. A case in point is that of Joseph Inikpi, an employee of Dekina Local Government who we confirmed to be dead. Our findings further revealed that upon the death of Joseph Inikpi, a woman inherited her identity and began to enjoy her entitlements.

    “This first woman subsequently transferred the benefit of late Inikpi to another woman who is currently again enjoying the benefits of late Inikpi. The first woman (now in Abuja) who inherited late Inikpi identity is the one with her passport photograph on the Employee Biodata Form whereas the second woman (now in Dekina) currently enjoying the benefits of late Inikpi is the one whose phone number is on the Employee Biodata Form.”

    The screening committee also discovered double and multiple employments. The report says: “These are wicked people and officers within the state who draw salaries in multiple from either both state, local and Federal Government as well as private companies.

    “The numbers of employees in the employment of State & Local Governments in this category are 114. This discovery was revealed through interfacing with NIBSS where the BVN of the individuals concerns revealed they were earning salaries from more than one source.”

    It was also observed that the Local Government Education Authority (LGEA) had an over-bloated workforce, with several redundant senior officers ranging from GL12 to GL 17 who had left classroom for offices, thereby leaving the school without experienced teachers.

    The officers, the report says, were employed as professional class teachers but decided to abandon their teaching profession to LGEA offices where there was no work to do.

    The committee found a case where some were employment before the Kogi was created, contrary to what is contained in their employment letters.

    The reports says: “This people were employed by State Universal Basic Education Board SUBEB in 1986 as teachers in Ofu LGA. Please note that Kogi State was created in August 27, 1991. The letterhead paper used for their employment between 1983 to 1991 was that of Kogi State Government, Lokoja. How this was possible is still a mystery.”

    There were also age discrepancies. A worker was said to have been employed on July 9, 2008 by Ankpa LGEA whereas she was born on May 7, 1996. By implication, she was employed at the age of 12.

    “She has no primary school certificate, finished SSCE in June 2014 by her records available with us,” the report found.

    Also discovered were diaspora workers. The report says: “These are set of people who claimed to be in the employment of Kogi State Government, being paid salaries but are residing outside Kogi and even outside the country.

    “We described these categories of people as diaspora workers because almost all withdrawals of the proceeds of their illegal salaries are made in locations outside Kogi State for several years.”

     

    Verification challenges

    According to Okala, the field work was extensive and thorough; the integrity of data tested very high, but not without challenges.

    “The second aspect of the Committee’s work, which is desk review, was marred with substantial fraud and high level of irregularities. It appears that these irregularities were deliberate effort by some enemies of the state who may have infiltrated the screening committee to manipulate and embarrass the state government and, by extension, the state governor for their selfish interest,” he said.

    The report says the cleared list is not 100 percent clean as “it might still harbour some potential illegal and fraudulent salary earners.”

    Okala said some state and Local Government staff verification forms were deliberately muddled up.

    “The only plausible explanation for this action could have been to cause apprehension among the civil servants across the state. In this category, a total of 1,016 Employee Biodata forms were found to be mixed-up and muddled up in MDAs different from where the civil servant is currently working.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • College empowers workers, students

    the Management Information System (MIS) Unit of the Adeyemi College of Education, Ondo has collaborated with the First Bank of Nigeria (FBN) to provide job creation training for both workers and students.

    The two-day seminar was attended by students from all five schools of the college (Languages, Arts and Social Sciences, Education, Science and Vocational and Technical Education) as well as teaching and non-members of teaching staff.

    Vice-Director of the MIS, Dr Kehinde Adelegan, said the aim of the programme was to help students/workers identify opportunities to generate multiple streams of income to augment their earnings.

    He said the training was timely given the present economic situation of the country.

    Kehinde, who also lectures in the Department of Mathematics, said officials of FBN were chosen as facilitators because of their vast experience and the bank’s profile as one of the leading financial institutions in Nigeria.

    The lecturer commended the Management led by Prof. Olukoya Ogen, for approving the seminar, and urged the participants to be attentive.

    Speaking on the topic: “Employment, business start up, business growth in the Information Communication Technology(ICT) age for Young and Knowledgeable People”, Adelakun Olubusuyi, Business Manager, FBN, Yaba, Ondo State, who led a 15-member delegation to the seminar, said the bank decided to collaborate with the college to help students gain knowledge.

    Adelakun lamented the inability of some employers to pay workers as well as closure of some business organisations in recent time.

    He said the development has brought untold hardship and affected the economy negatively.

    On ways to address the problem, Adelakun advised participants to take advantage of what he described as ‘’tailor-made financial products’’ available in his bank.

    This he said could help achieve their dreams and meet their immediate goals.

    The FBN senior official also took participants through the rudiments of Marketing and urged them to take advantage of various opportunities being rolled out by his bank, through which they could earn income without stress in any part of the country including the rural areas.