The Federal
Government said it will set up a five-man committee to holistically study the
complaints on the Integrated Payroll Personnel Information System (IPPIS) by
the unions.
The committee will examine the complaints with a view to harmonising its activities and operations.
Sen. Chris
Ngige, the Minister of Labour and Employment made this known as the conclusion
reached at the end of the meeting between the Federal Government and the
leadership of the Non-Academics Staff Union of Nigerian universities and other
stakeholders on Wednesday in Abuja.
The
Non-Academics Staff Union of Nigerian universities includes the Academic Staff
Union of Educational, Associated Institutions (NASU) and the Senior Staff of
Nigerian Universities (SSANU).
The Federal
Government said it will set up a five-man committee to holistically study the
complaints on the Integrated Payroll Personnel Information System (IPPIS) by
the unions.
The committee
will examine the complaints with a view to harmonising its activities and
operations.
Sen. Chris
Ngige, the Minister of Labour and Employment made this known as the conclusion
reached at the end of the meeting between the Federal Government and the
leadership of the Non-Academics Staff Union of Nigerian universities and other
stakeholders on Wednesday in Abuja.
The
Non-Academics Staff Union of Nigerian universities includes the Academic Staff
Union of Educational, Associated Institutions (NASU) and the Senior Staff of
Nigerian Universities (SSANU).
NASU and
SSANU had on Oct. 5, issued the Federal Government a14-day warning strike over
alleged failure to address its demands.
The unions’
demands include inconsistencies in IPPIS payments, non-payment of earned
allowances, non-payment of arrears of minimum wage, delay in a renegotiation of
government NASU and SSANU 2009 agreements, among others.
Ngige said
that the meeting after its deliberation was fruitful.
He said that
it was resolved that a five-man committee should be set up to holistically look
into the complaints on IPPIS by the unions with a view to harmonising its
activities and operations.
“IPPIS is to
involve the unions and identify those staff that have been captured but have
not been receiving salaries and paid to them.
“The
committee is to identify those unions whose check-off dues have been deducted
but not remitted and paid to them. To facilitate this, unions are to forward
the necessary data to IPPIS.
“On the issue
of welfare, the unions are to submit the necessary documentation to assist
IPPIS to make deductions on or before Oct. 23. The committee is given two weeks
to conclude its assignment, ” he said.
The minister
said the members of the committee would be drawn from the National Salaries
Income and Wages Commission (NSIWC), Ministry of Labour and Employment, IPPIS,
National Universities Commission (NUC) and Office of the Head of Service of the
Federation.
He said that
the meeting resolved that the N30 billion earlier agreed with the Academic
Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) on the Non-Payment of Earned Allowances
would include all the unions in the university sector.
Ngige said
that unions such as the National Association of Academic Technologist (NAAT),
NASU and SSANU, and all the unions were to work with the Accountant General of
the Federation (AGF), NUC and Ministry of Education to achieve that by the end
of December.
“On the
non-payment of arrears of minimum wage, the office of the AGF is to compute
arrears from April 2019 to January 2020 and forward to the Federal Ministry of
Education to process it through the Ministry of Finance for payment. A timeline
of two weeks was given.
“On the delay
in the renegotiation of government, NASU and SSANU 2009 agreements, the
renegotiation committee will be reconstituted on or before Oct. 31 and
renegotiation will be concluded on or before Dec. 31,” he said.
Ngige said
that the meeting also resolved that on the issue of the non-payment of
retirement benefits of outgone members that the AGF, IPPIS, OHCSF and the
Pension Commission (PENCOM) are to make enquiries and update the meeting in two
weeks.
He said that
the universities were to forward the death benefit claims for members that died
before March 2020 through the Ministry of Education to the OHCSF for
processing.
Ngige said it
also agreed on the Teaching Staff Usurping Non-Teaching Units in Clear
Violation of Condition of Service and Establishment Procedures that the unions
were to write to the NUC and the NUC should to act on the letter within two
weeks
He said the
meeting also agreed that on the neglect and poor funding of state universities,
the NUC Act would be amended to strengthen its regulatory capacity.
He, however,
noted that it was also agreed that the unions would work with NUC and involve
the relevant Committee of the National Assembly (NASS).
“On the
non-constitution of visitation panels for universities, the meeting was
informed that the visitation panels to federal universities have been approved
by Mr President but they have not been gazetted.
“The Federal
Ministry of Education is to ensure gazetting within two weeks on Oct. 29.
“The meeting
agreed that the panel will be inaugurated latest by the end of November and
then it will have a four to six weeks’ mandate to finish its work by Dec. 31.
“This is
subject to the gazetting and opening of universities and submits two reports
per university covering five year periods of 2011 to 2015 and 2016 to 2020, ”
he said.

No comments:
Post a Comment