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From: Dominic Tweedie <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Fri, 06 May 2011 07:10:51 
To: <[email protected]>
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Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] Blade fights for control of Seta 'spaza shops'

 
  Mail and Guardain 
 
 
 Blade fights for control of Seta 'spaza shops' 
   
   
 Ilham Rawoot and David Macfarlane, Mail and Guardian, Johannesburg, 6 May 2011 
   
 Blade Nzimande has serial legal battles to fight if he is to secure his recent 
radical overhaul of the skills sector. But many trade unionists and 
educationists are solidly behind him on the need to shake up the sector. 
   
 This week the Labour Court ruled that the higher education and training 
minister had exceeded his powers in terms of the Skills Development Act by 
radically changing the constitution that dictates who controls the Services 
Seta (sector education and training authority). The new constitution is 
supposed to govern all the other 20 Setas. 
   
 He would move urgently to amend the legislation, his department said this 
week. He faces a further Labour Court action over the R1-billion he transferred 
from the bank account of the same Seta that inflicted Tuesday's stinging legal 
defeat on him. 
   
 At the heart of the legal warfare between the Services Seta and Nzimande is 
control of the state's multibillion-rand skills development machinery. Nzimande 
will appeal against the Labour Court's judgment. 
   
 Ivor Blumenthal, the Seta's chief executive, found himself suspended and 
marched from his office two weeks ago when the new management, appointed in 
terms of Nzimande's fresh constitution, took over the Seta. The amended 
constitution "places the entire Services Seta in the minister's hands", 
Blumenthal said. 
   
 "Organised business and labour are completely stripped of their authority. The 
private sector - namely organised business by way of business associations and 
organised labour by way of trade unions, and professional collective 
associations - has governed every aspect of the Services Seta on behalf of our 
180 000 members for the past decade." 
   
 The Labour Court's Judge Annelie Basson noted the unusual mixture of 
applicants in the matter. "The court is faced with the extraordinary situation 
where significant representatives of [business] and representatives of 
organised labour have united as applicants to contest the validity of various 
actions by the minister," she said in her judgment. 
   
 But this outcome is a "temporary setback", the higher education and training 
department said in a statement on Wednesday. In addition to appealing against 
the judgment, Nzimande would "urgently undertake comprehensive legislative 
changes to ensure more effective oversight of government over the Setas", the 
statement said. 
   
 In a further legal move the Services Seta, and nine other applicants, filed an 
urgent application in the Labour Court on Wednesday to retrieve the R1-billion 
that it argues Nzimande unlawfully transferred two weeks ago from its bank 
account to the National Skills Fund. 
   
 The application asks the court to order Nzimande to "take all necessary 
measures immediately to ensure the re-transfer of all funds". Education 
activists and unions generally support Nzimande's aims in overhauling the 
Setas, but question his methods and his department's capabilities. 
   
 "He had good intentions," said independent education activist Sheri Hamilton. 
"But the way he's gone about it is not correct. He should have brought people 
on board through consultation and not approached them in an authoritarian 
manner." 
   
 One unionist who asked not to be named said: "The minister understands exactly 
what has to be done, but he has surrounded himself with fools. This is going to 
lead him into making a balls-up over and over again." Seta managements do need 
to be scrutinised, said Suraya Jawoodeen, deputy general secretary of Cosatu 
affiliate Nehawu. 
   
 "No one should be resisting change if it's about streamlining and downsizing," 
she said. "We can't have CEOs and boards of Setas personalising them and 
running them like their own spaza shops." 
   
 Jawoodeen said Setas "need to be streamlined. They are cumbersome and 
expensive and many are chaotically managed and do not fulfil their mandate." 
Gwebs Qonde, acting director general of Nzimande's department, said the other 
20 Setas are on board. 
   
 "They've fully cooperated and all signed the new constitution," he told the 
Mail & Guardian. "The Setas can't be allowed to keep rolling out short-term 
skills training that continues to produce cheap labour -- which especially 
means black people. 
   
 "The way some Setas have operated has generated a huge industry of private 
providers of training that's excessively expensive and merely reproduces a 
system of cheap labour." 
   
 - Additional reporting by Amanda Strydom
   
 
  
 From: 
http://mg.co.za/article/2011-05-06-blade-fights-for-control-of-seta-spaza-shops
  
  
   

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