We Won’t Pay Staff Schools Workers Salaries Again – FG
The Federal Government has formally hands off the
payment of salaries of teaching and non-academic
workers of staff schools in institutions across the
country.
The National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission
specifically said government should not be responsible
for the payment of their salaries because of its
overbearing effect on the budget.
Part of the mandate of the commission includes
monitoring the wage sector and advising the Federal
Government on the fixing and regulation of workers’
salaries and other remuneration as well as the control of
personnel costs.
The announcement by the chairman of NSIWC, Chief
Richard Egbule, during a press briefing on Wednesday in
Abuja came on the heels of threat by the Senior Staff
Association of Nigerian Universities to embark on strike if
the Federal Government refused to fund the schools
which were said to have been established by the
institutions.
“I would like to appeal to staff unions not to distract the
new government with unnecessary demands.
The government has stopped payment of salaries of
members of staff in the primary and secondary schools
in these tertiary institutions and the decision is final,” he
said.
He recalled that in an agreement signed between the
Federal Government and SSANU in November 2009, it
was clear that universities should bear the full capital and
costs of both staff primary and secondary schools, while
parents of pupils and students should bear the recurrent
costs.
Egbule said that in the course of its inspection, the
commission observed a trend in which government-
owned institutions charge the funding of staff schools
established by them to government treasury.
This, he said, contributed to the overbloating of the
recurrent cost in government budget.
To correct the situation, the commission said a study it
carried out in 2013 to ascertain the number of staff
schools in the country revealed many disturbing trends.
“Fourty-eight did not have staff schools, 21 funded their
staff schools from their internally generated revenue,
while 51 funded theirs from federal treasury budget
sources by hiding the staff lists of such schools as part of
the institution’s authentic members of staff.
“In some instances, the staff salary of such schools was
placed on the salary structure meant for tertiary
educational institutions, which is higher in quantum than
the Consolidated Public Service Salary Structure which
has been costing the Federal Government about N4bn
per annum,” Egbule stated.
The commission added that based on its findings, it
issued a circular with reference number SWC/S/04S.446/
T2/85 dated August 27, 2014” in which it stated that the
policy was applicable to all staff schools meant for the
children of the personnel of such institutions and other
members of the public regardless of the nomenclature
used.
The National President of SSANU, Samson Ugwoke, told
had journalists in Abuja that the government’s decision
would contravene an earlier agreement reached between
government and relevant associations in 2009.
The agreement, he said, was that government would
continue with the funding of recurrent and capital
expenditures of universities’ staff schools.
“An institution (the National Universities Commission),
that is supposed to advise the government rightly is not
doing so. We are calling on the government to do the
needful and what is right.
This is the last warning and you will not hear from us
again until we take action because strike is imminent,” he
threatened.
According to him, the schools were established by
statues and therefore made provision for employment of
relevant workers by the universities’ council.
Ugwoke had said government should not resort to
distribution of directives through circulars and throw
thousands of employees into the labour market.
He argued that the law should be changed before such a
directive could be implemented.
Tweet @Lastborn11 (07060428346)
Comments
Post a Comment
Your comments are highly needed.
Thanks.