SOBER REFLECTION AS SA’S CCMA TURNS 15
 
As the world teeters on the brink of a further slide toward what looks like 
economic chaos, the Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA)
yesterday (subs: Thursday) marked 15 years of existence. Director Nerine Kahn 
proudly noted that there was much to celebrate, but there was no celebration.
As befits the times, the occasion was marked by a period of serious reflection. 
Top labour law specialists gathered to discuss, debate and analyse what the 
CCMA has
done, is doing and may do in future.
 
“We didn’t ask them to come and be polite. We will conduct an audit: the state 
of the labour market. What is the dream? How have we done?” says Kahn.
Although she does not say so, the decision to stage a “think tank” is also a 
reflection of the pressure now being put on one of the country’s major labour 
relations
innovations. Austerity being the current global watchword, institutions such as 
the CCMA are likely to see their budgets frozen or even reduced.
 
And while she tries to navigate the state bureaucracy, she is probably already 
aware that there is also some questioning within government circles about 
whether the
expense of maintaining the CCMA is really necessary; that the labour courts and 
private conciliation agencies should handle labour disputes.
Elements in the business sector who remain hostile to the “interference” of the 
CCMA tend to support this view, despite the fact that the organisation’s 
governing
body consists of representatives from labour, business and government. They 
resent curbs on what they see as their managerial right to hire and fire at 
will.
 
Yet there is consensus, certainly within the labour movement, that industrial 
relations would have been a great deal more chaotic had it not been for the 
CCMA. It is also
widely agreed that, given the ongoing global economic crisis, there will, in 
coming months and years, be greater tension within the labour market and a 
greater need to
uphold the social justice the CCMA embodies.
 
This aspect of social justice is what tends to stand out for most of the 1.4 
million workers whose cases have made their way to the CCMA over the past 
decade and a
half. It is part of the mandate of the organisation that was established by the 
Labour Relations Act (LRA) with the somewhat idealistic goals of advancing 
“economic
development, social justice, labour peace and the democracy of the workplace”.
 
The primary role was to settle amicably labour disputes and this would 
obviously contribute toward labour peace. But, above all, it amounted to a 
major break with the
attitudes and the masters and servants legislation of the apartheid past, 
putting employers and employees on an equal footing in the resolution of 
disputes — at least
in terms of conciliation and arbitration.
 
Because it provides a free service, without the intervention of legal teams, 
even unorganised workers have increasingly come to know about and to appreciate 
the
existence of the CCMA. Domestic workers, for example, now comprise 9 per cent 
of the CCMA case load and outreach educational work by CCMA commissioners
among farmers and farm labourers is starting to bring this generally neglected 
area into formal dispute resolution. But, as one commissioners notes, employers 
with deep pockets can still “thumb their noses” at the CCMA by dragging out the 
dispute process when they have not got their way. This is done by taking 
matters to the labour court and further if necessary until financially 
exhausted worker claimants fall by the wayside.
 
Or, having taken matters as far as the labour court, and obviously being in the 
wrong, an employer can simply pay off a desperate worker. One of the classic 
examples in
the early years of the CCMA was the age discrimination case brought by Virginia 
Swart who, at 29, was considered “too old” to work in a video store. In debt and
desperate, she accepted R1 500 offered to her on her doorstep and dropped the 
case.
 
There are also instances when employers simply ignore arbitration awards made 
against them. “This is very frustrating and we can’t help,” says Kahn. Even when
warrants are issued by the courts, workers have to pay a sheriff — part of an 
outsourced business — to have them served on the defaulting employer, something
many workers simply cannot afford.
 
But these constitute a small minority of cases and most receive no publicity 
other than word of mouth. A great deal of formal publicity over the years has 
also been
negative, often arising from complaints by employers who have better access, 
and better ability, to use the media. Yet some of the criticism, especially in 
the earlier years, was justified. Various “teething troubles” and what one 
commissioner calls “glitches” marred the proper functioning of the 
organisation. It took time to get solidly on track; to ensure the adequate 
training and appointment of commissioners and to gradually extend CCMA services.
 
However, Kahn is quick to point out that while the ratio of negative to 
positive publicity tends not to have changed, the CCMA certainly has, both in 
terms of
efficiency and in the sheer volume of cases handled. In the 12 months to the 
end of March, for example, commissioners around the country dealt with 154 279 
cases, an
average of 591 a day.
 
More than 90 per cent of these were settled, either by conciliation, usually 
within 30 days, or by arbitration within 60 days. Monitoring by the 
organisation reveals that
fewer than 7 per cent of cases handled result in 99 per cent of the relatively 
sparse publicity generated.
 
It is an admirable record that reflects the reality that the demand and need 
for CCMA services is increasing steadily. This is unlikely to change, given the 
latest dismal
projections about economic growth and job creation prospects.
 
So, for the sake of preserving an element of social justice, let alone ensuring 
greater industrial peace, the powers that be would do well to heed the call of 
labour and
provide the CCMA with more resources and perhaps greater powers.
 
Terry Bell
writing, editing, broadcasting
specialising in:
political/economic analysis and labour
P.O Box 373, Muizenberg 7950
South Africa
Tel: +27 +(0)21 788 9699 • Fax: +27 +(0)21 788 9711
Skype: belnews
Blog: terrybellwrites.wordpress.com

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