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    Home » News » What’s really behind the Icasa strike

    What’s really behind the Icasa strike

    By Agency Staff4 July 2016
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    Some of the Icasa employees demonstrate after going on strike on Monday
    Some of the Icasa employees demonstrate after going on strike on Monday

    Almost 100 staff of communications regulator Icasa went on strike on Monday over a pay and human resource policies dispute.

    Over 70 workers picketed outside Icasa’s head office in Sandton while another 27 staff went on strike across South Africa, said organiser of the strike Susan Mashinini.

    The workers want a pay rise of 7% and bonus pay, back-dated to 2014. The workers also want human resource policies, such as a performance management system, scrapped.

    These issues have been bubbling since 2014 when workers decided to abandon their memberships with the Communication Workers Union (CWU), Mashinini said.

    At the time, Mashinini said the CWU was meant to help negotiate a planned restructuring at Icasa, but workers felt that the union failed to represent them properly.

    Subsequently, the Icasa workers tried joining labour union Solidarity but then decided to rather consult a legal and human resources firm, which took their matter to the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA).

    The CCMA then gave the Icasa workers the permission to strike as a deal couldn’t be reached, said Mashinini.

    “They (Icasa management) haven’t given us a salary increase for two years, since 2014/2015, because they said we are earning a lot, which we do not even know what informed that — where does that come from? There’s no precedent, there’s nothing, we don’t know where that comes from,” Mashinini said.

    “At that particular time, the very same people (Icasa management) who say we are earning a lot, they are driving X5s, X6s — you name all these big SUVs, they’re driving them. And it’s worse, it’s black on black, they are doing this [to] their own black brothers and sisters.

    “I’m not trying to be racist here; I’m not understanding why would they do that on us. You know when it’s your fellow man, you wear that expectation that he will treat you in a better way,” said Mashinini.

    The strike will only end when workers “demands are met”, said Mashinini.

    When contacted for comment earlier on Monday, Icasa spokesman Palesa Maleka said Icasa staff “are not happy with some of the policies because they say they weren’t properly consulted”.

    But Maseka said work at Icasa, which regulates the communications and telecommunications industry in South Africa, is ongoing despite the strike.

    Icasa still needs to issue its findings on a complaint about the SABC banning footage of protests on its broadcasts. The findings on the matter is expected by Friday, Maseka said.

    “Business continues,” Maseka said. “There are those staff that are not striking,” he added.

    Meanwhile, unity among workers is “scarce” at Icasa, said Mashinini.

    “There is no unity at all. They are just intimidating, firing people. I don’t know how many people have resigned,” Mashinini said. “We are tired as workers.”

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