16 March 2020
Dear Metals and Engineering Sector Stakeholder
RESIGN AND THEN WHAT…?
There is a good chance that, by now, you have had at least one of NEASA’s newsletters
referring deprecatingly to the forthcoming negotiations with labour, within the MEIBC, on
wages and conditions of employment. It is that organisation’s right to communicate to
stakeholders in the sector; we do not always respond to its fulminations, but we feel
obliged to do so in this case because of NEASA’s unhealthy obsession with SEIFSA
and its tendency to bend the truth when it suits it.
While we are accustomed to it by now, nevertheless we find that organisation’s conduct
no less bizarre, especially considering that NEASA has not signed an agreement in the
MEIBC since 2010/ 2011 and has, by its own admission, spent R24 million of its
members’ money on litigating against all and sundry: the trade unions, the Department
of Employment and Labour and, of course, SEIFSA, its nemesis and preferred
scapegoat.
In the interest of transparency and the truth, we provide you with the facts below:
- NEASA represents approximately 59 000 employees in a Bargaining Council that
represents approximately 308 000 employees, which is less than 20% of the
employees on the payroll of all the employer organisations represented on the
MEIBC; while - Employers that are members of Associations which sit on the Bargaining Council
and are affiliated to SEIFSA represent 56% of employees on the MEIBC.
It is strange but understandable, given its unhealthy obsession with SEIFSA, that
NEASA makes no mention whatsoever of either the six other employer organisations
that sit on the MEIBC, or the other four trade unions, in addition to NUMSA, that will
soon be commencing negotiations in the sector.
Just as employees have a right to join (or not join) any trade union of their choice, so,
too, do employers have a right to join (or not) any organisation of their choice. Freedom
of association (or choice) is, after all, one of the key rights enshrined in our Constitution
as a country.
Today’s economy is global. In our experience, most companies value stability and
predictability, and not bluster, hot air and empty promises. They recognize that pre-1994
South Africa is gone – and gone for good and not coming back. It is our experience that
these companies are perfectly capable of making informed choices – and do not need
to be fed propaganda and told what to do.
The Main Agreement is a comprehensive set of terms and conditions of employment
covering everything from how to deal with load shedding, short-time, implementing a
lay-off and, of course, wages.
The stark reality is that no other piece of legislation or agreement that NEASA may have
under its sleeve shows you, legally, how to respond to these challenges. We have
found, over the years, that many companies in the metals and engineering sector
consider the Main Agreement which is concluded in the negotiations to be their
operating manual, their compass and their guide in responding to everyday shop-floor
problems and other challenges faced by employers in surviving the most volatile of
times being experienced in living memory.
SEIFSA is made up of more than 20 independent Employer Associations – representing
small, medium-sized and large companies – and the Associations together develop our
negotiating mandate. We operate strictly in accordance with that mandate.
We implore you, therefore: pay no heed to the bluster and bravado of the likes of
NEASA, which has not concluded any deal with any union in this sector in the past
decade. The organisation excels only in sowing discord, uncertainty and instability at a
time when real leadership is required.
Kaizer M. Nyatsumba
Chief executive Officer