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The three major organs of the Trade Union Congress (TUC)
will meet between Wednesday and Thursday next week to review the implementation
of the new minimum wage in states.
The organs – the National Administrative Council (NAC), the
Central Working Committee and the National Executive Council will meet with
state chairmen of the 36 state councils and national to take a decision after
some states failed to conclude negotiations on consequential adjustments with
labour leaders in their domains.
TUC President, Comrade Quadri Olaleye, and its
Secretary-General, Comrade Musa-Lawal Ozigi, confirmed the meeting in separate
interviews on Friday.
Olaleye said: “The TUC have called for a meeting next week
to review the process and decide the next line of action.”
Ozigi said all the states council chairmen are expected to
bring their reports for review at the meeting.
About 15 states have yet to conclude negotiations on the new
minimum wage with labour leaders in their states after the December 31 deadline
issued by organised labour to governors to sign agreements with their workers
on consequential adjustments.
The states—Ekiti, Cross River, Benue, Gombe, Osun, Sokoto,
Oyo, Niger, Ogun, Enugu, Bayelsa, Rivers, Kwara, Taraba and Anambra—are yet to
agree on consequential adjustments of salaries as a result of the new minimum
wage.
Some states like Lagos, Kaduna, Bauchi, Kastina and Borno
had agreed to pay the new minimum wage while some have actually started
implementation.
However, other states started negotiations few days to the
end of the December 31 deadline set by organised labour.
Six months after President Muhammadu Buhari signed the new
wage bill into law, the Federal Government and organised labour agreed on
consequential adjustments on October 18, 2019, after a prolonged negotiation.
The Federal Government and organised labour agreed on
percentage increase of 23.2 for workers on level seven and 20 per cent for
workers on level eight, while it agreed on 19 per cent increase for workers on
level nine.
Also, both the Federal Government and organised labour
reached an agreement on 16 per cent salary increase for workers on levels 10 to
14 and 14 per cent increase for workers on levels 15 to 17.
Ozigi said the NLC was also expected to call a meeting of
its state chairmen to decide the next line of action.
He said: “We are having our NEC meeting next week Thursday.
All the state councils are expected to bring in their reports.
“All of them are coming to Lagos for us to see what has
happened in all the states and then formulate an appropriate action.
“After 9th (Thursday), a decision would have been taken that
will be announced to the whole world by TUC.
“All the organs—the National Administrative Council (NAC),
the Central Working Committee and the National Executive Council—will meet
between 8th and 9th to review the situation and take a decision on
implementation.”
Niger gets 21-day ultimatum to implement new wage
The organised labour in Niger State yesterday gave the Niger
State Government a 21- day ultimatum to pay the new minimum wage of N30,000 or
the workers in the state would down tools.
The decision was taken at the emergency State Executive
Council (SEC) meeeting which ended yesterday evening.
The organised labour carpeted the state government over its
nonchalant attitude to issues raised concerning the minimum wage.
In a letter jointly signed by the state NLC Chairman,
Comrade Yakubu Garba and the state Chairman of Trade Union Congress (TUC),
Comrade Yunusa Tanimu, the organised labour said the government had left them
with no option but to issue the ultimatum.
The letter titled “Notice of 21 Days Ultimatum for Indefinite
Strike Action” called on the government to implement the N30,000 new minimum
wage, the consequential adjustments and also pay the accrued arrears before
Monday, 4th February 2020, failing which it will be left with no other option
but to commence an indefinite strike action by midnight of Tuesday, 4th
February 2020.
The Niger State Government had said in December 2019 that
its 2020 budget was based on the payment of the N30,000 minimum wage.
The government had also on many occasions stated that the state
would not have any difficulty in paying the N30,000 minimum wage because the
workers were already receiving N22,500.
“What we need now is N7,500. We have taken care of that in
the budget,” the Commissioner of Finance, Alhaji Zakari Abubakar, said in December.
Umahi directs payment of new wage from January 10
In Ebonyi State, Governor David Umahi yesterday directed
that civil Servants in the state be paid their January salary from January 10.
The governor in a statement said the new minimum wage table agreed
upon between the organised labour in the state and his administration will be
used in the payment.
The directive is an improvement on the previous policy of
paying workers their salary from the 15th of every month.
In the statement signed by the Governor’s Special Assistant
on Media, Francis Nwaze, the governor said the early payment was meant to give
workers a smooth start as they return to work from the holidays.
According to Nwaze, the governor directed that the state
Accountant General and all the local government chairmen should seek overdraft
facilities from banks to enable them pay the new wages on time. (The Nation)


