Business Report.jpg

 

 

Hard truths for COSATU to consider

 

 

Shanti Aboobaker, Business Report, Johannesburg, 26 November 2015

 

Labour Minister Mildred Oliphant delivered some hard truths to COSATU's
congress yesterday, accusing some of its leaders of supporting labour
brokers.

 

The minister also asked why COSATU's investment company, Kopano ke Matla,
was part of the e-tolls project when the federation was so opposed to the
system.

 

Oliphant, who was invited to speak at the Midrand meeting, said there were
too many unions and union federations.

 

"Our labour law was built on the foundation of strong trade unions. Quite
frankly, this foundation has of late become very shaky with the
proliferation of small and fragmented unions that are mushrooming all over
the place," she told delegates.

 

Labour brokers allowed

 

She said some COSATU affiliates "allowed the proliferation of labour brokers
in their industries" as part of their own bargaining agreements.

 

"They agree that labour brokers must continue, that the only thing that the
employers must do is to inform the union that they are continuing," Oliphant
said without naming the unions, leading to gasps from delegates.

 

"But at the same time, in that particular agreement, the very same labour
brokers" were instructed, she said to "pay skills levy for training of the
shop steward to the union".

 

Oliphant asked COSATU to investigate its affiliates who allowed labour
broking in their investment companies "because if you don't do that, you
will always have complaints that (the) government has not banned labour
brokers while at the same time you are working together with those
companies".

 

She hit out at the investment companies, saying they caused divisions in
unions as workers did not benefit much while the administration fees were
sky high.

 

Rival unions

 

Oliphant said some of the divisions around misappropriation of investment
companies had led to the emergence of rival unions, "often set up by the
union officials of the same union they seek to destabilise".

 

"This is a recipe for anarchy," she said.

 

Oliphant was also unhappy that strikes were no longer a last resort of
unions, but rather a "fashion statement for those with something to prove to
rival unions".

 

She said strikes lasted longer than was necessary.

 

Oliphant appealed to unions to do a cost benefit analysis to realise when it
was time for mass action to end.

 

Labour Bureau

 

The Mercury

 

From:
http://www.iol.co.za/business/news/hard-truths-for-cosatu-to-consider-1.1950
969#.VlbFmnYrK00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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