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UCT failed to bargain with Employees' Union, says CCMA

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Wage negotiations between the University of Cape Town (UCT) and the UCT Employees’ Union are to start soon.
Wage negotiations between the University of Cape Town (UCT) and the UCT Employees’ Union are to start soon.
Archive photo: Ashraf Hendricks

Wage negotiations between the University of Cape Town (UCT) and one of the largest representative unions - the UCT Employees' Union - will start soon.

This comes after negotiations with management deadlocked earlier this year after several referrals to the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) last year.

The union represents a range of staff, including administrative workers, technical officers, managers and executive directors.

It is the union for most non-academic staff responsible for administration, technical work and management at the university. These are known as professional, administrative and support service (PASS) staff.

The UCT Employees' Union had said that management had been refusing to come to the bargaining table over several issues related to salary increases. The dispute was then referred to the CCMA.

The union told the CCMA that UCT had acted in "bad faith", that it had "frustrated the dispute resolution procedure", and had "failed to schedule the dispute resolution hearing".

The university denied that it had refused to bargain with the union.

UCT said it had merely terminated its recognition agreement with the union in order to form a single bargaining unit, including PASS staff.

READ | Stellenbosch University vice-chancellor in nepotism controversy

But, in a recent CCMA award, the commissioner, Maureen de Beer, stated that UCT had in fact refused to bargain with the union.

She said the CCMA recommended both parties return to wage negotiations, and that all pay classes be included in one bargaining unit at next year's wage negotiations.

The commissioner noted that there appeared to be "a breakdown in the relationship between the current parties and other unions within the workplace".

UCT's spokesperson, Elijah Moholola, told GroundUp that the university had committed to bargain with the union's PASS staff "in the spirit of maintaining good labour relations".

Union representative Samuel Chetty said the UCT Employees' Union had already sent its bargaining demands to the university, which included salary increases and non-salary demands.

He said they had already discussed the terms of reference for the negotiations and expected the bargaining to start soon.

Chetty said the union supported suggestions by the CCMA that a single bargaining unit be formed to include the "lowest pay class to the highest pay class" at the university.


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