The Technical University Teachers Association of Ghana (TUTAG) has issued a strike notice if the government does not resolve some unresolved issues affecting its members within 10 days.
The Association says it will not accept any further delays and has expressed concerns about the government’s failure to comply with National Labour Commission’s (NLC) ruling to pay certain allowances to its members, among other things.
“We wish to inform the government that the National Executive of TUTAG has been stretched to its end to the unresolved issues and would therefore not be able to guarantee industrial harmony on the various campuses,” Professor Collins Ameyaw, President of TUTAG cautioned at a news conference in Kumasi.
He said that the government’s disregard for the rulings of the NLC on the “codified Conditions of Service (CoS) for members of TUTAG which had been outstanding since 2016 was worrying”.
He also bemoaned the reluctance on the part of the NLC to enforce its own ruling against the government, saying that, TUTAG had patiently engaged government amidst a feet-dragging posture on its part.
He further reiterated that the NLC on September 2, 2022 ruled on the effective date of payment for the Internally Generated Fund (IGF) component of the allowances to be August 2021, as negotiated and agreed by the parties.
The same ruling also directed the Minister of Finance (MoF) to ensure payment by issuing the necessary letters to the various University Councils within a reasonable time to make budgetary provisions in the budget, he stated.
Subsequent to these rulings, he said that the TUTAG had endured several processes expected to culminate into the Ministry of Finance issuing an authorization letter to the Universities to effect payment.
The same ruling also directed the Minister of Finance (MoF) to ensure payment by issuing the necessary letters to the various University Councils within a reasonable time to make budgetary provisions in the budget, he stated.
Subsequent to these rulings, he said, TUTAG had endured several processes expected to culminate into the Ministry of Finance issuing an authorisation letter to the Universities to effect payment.
“Unfortunately, despite numerous follow-ups the MoF has not shown any commitment to issue the letter to the Universities,” he complained.
He said TUTAG members had invariably been denied their appropriate benefits within the scope of the reviewed IGF-related conditions of service.
Prof Ameyaw said the inertia displayed by the MoF in failing to authorise Councils of Technical Universities as directed by the NLC to budget for and pay the allowances was creating uneasiness on campuses of various Technical Universities.
Another worrying observation by TUTAG, he noted, was the attitude of Vice Chancellors of Technical Universities in the matter of conditions of service of the Association.
He said TUTAG had picked intelligence that the Vice Chancellors were in backdoor negotiation with some government agencies to defer the effective date of IGF-related conditions of service to January, 2023 instead of August, 2021.
“We wish to state that the actions of the Vice Chancellors amount to unfair labour practice, especially when we have concluded negotiations on the allowances in question”, he pointed out.
He urged the Vice Chancellors to desist from such interference in the work of TUTAG to ensure industrial harmony on various campuses.