SEIFSA ACCEPTS MINISTER'S PROPOSAL ON WAGES BUT NOT ON SECTION 37
Published: 22 July 2014
JOHANNESBURG, 22 JULY 2014 - The Steel and Engineering Industries Federation of Southern Africa (SEIFSA) has reluctantly accepted Labour Minister Mildred Oliphant's proposal to offer wage increases of 10% to low-level employees in the metals and engineering sector over three years, but insisted overwhelmingly on the need for Section 37 of the Main Agreement of the Metal and Engineering Industries Bargaining Council (MEIBC) to be tightened up in order to protect employers from double dipping.
At a SEIFSA Special Council meeting yesterday afternoon to discuss a Ministerial Proposal which, was shared with all employers' organisations and trade unions on Saturday, a slim majority of employer Associations affiliated to the Federation agreed to a 10% wage increase for low-level employees over the next three years, on condition that the offer is accepted by the unions not later than Friday, 25 July. An overriding condition for the proposal's acceptance was that the unions agreed to an inclusion of a clause in the Main Agreement which indicated that matters that would materially impact on the cost of employment would not be raised for negotiation at company level.
The conditionally-approved wage offer is 10% for rates F, G and H in 2014, for rates G and H in 2015 and for rate H in 2016, and 8% in 2014, 7,5% in 2015 and 7% in 2016 respectively for rate A.
SEIFSA Chief Executive Officer Kaizer Nyatsumba said that members of the Federation overwhelmingly reiterated their position that they would not sign any settlement agreement until their concerns about recent Labour Court judgments regarding Section 37 were addressed. He said that they wanted the section amended to confirm its original intention, when the clause was introduced into the Main Agreement in 1992, that all matters which could materially add to the cost of employment would be negotiated collectively in the Bargaining Council.