Two months after the directive given by the tripartite plus meeting held at the Presidential Villa, Abuja the National Information Technology Development Agency, NITDA has completed the fresh integrity test on the University Transparency Accountability Solution, UTAS designed by the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU as replacement for IPPIS introduced by the Federal Government.
Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment confirmed this in
a statement in Abuja, the nation’s capital.
Adoption of UTAS to replace IPPIS is the main demand of ASUU
to call off the five-month old strike by university lecturers.
Below is the full text of the statement
FG to ASUU: President does not Sign Collective Bargaining
Agreement
The Federal
Government has stated that there is no Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA)
between it and the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) which currently
awaits signing by the President.
The Honourable
Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige, said even when
such a Collective Bargaining Agreement is produced between unions and the
Federal Government, it is not the President that signs but the Government side
– MDAs led by the direct employer – with the concilliating ministry witnessing.
This clarification
has become necessary in view of the deluge of deliberate misinformation being
dished out to Nigerians by the President of ASUU, Prof. Osodeke, as well as his
branch leaders, calling on President Buhari to sign an agreement which they
claimed to have reached with the Federal Government.
Senator Ngige therefore wishes to inform Nigerians that
there is no such Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) that has been
reached between the Federal Government,
ASUU and other university unions on the renegotiation of their salaries and
allowances (wages). What is in existence is a
proposal. Even when such CBA is made, it is not the President that signs
it. From available records, no Nigerian President or sovereign signs such.
The true position is that Nigerians are aware that ASUU has
been on strike since February 14, 2022 and locked in negotiations on their
demand, especially of their conditions of service – wages , salaries,
allowances and other public service matters,
that should be guided by relevant Federal Government Ministries and
agencies – Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Education, Ministry of Labour and
Employment, Budget Office of the Federation, National Salaries Income and Wages
Commission, Office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation, through the
newly set-up Prof. Nimi Briggs Committee.
It is pertinent to
note that that Prof Nimi Brigg Committee, just like the Prof. Munzali Committee
it replaced, is an internal committee of the Ministry of Education to receive
ASUU demands and renegotiate areas of 2009 Agreement while also receiving
briefs from the MDAs mentioned above that act as advisers, before making any
counter offer to ASUU and other unions.
Unfortunately, ASUU insisted that these relevant advisory
MDAs recuse themselves from the sitting of the Briggs Committee, accusing them
of non-cooperation. All alone with the Prof Briggs Committee, ASUU started
fixing their salaries and allowances to
the exclusion of the statutory government ministries and agencies that manage
the entire annual finances of government, budget and fiscal policies, and the
Office of the Head of Civil Service that is in charge of ensuring that public service
rules and regulations are not undermined in any condition of service offered to
public officers in the universities.
Consequent upon this exclusion engineered by ASUU, and the
arising complaints to the Chief of Staff to the President and the Honourable
Minister of Labour and Employment by the concerned MDAs, the Chief of Staff and
the Honourable Minister of Labour set up an inter-Ministerial/Agency
sub-committee, comprising the affected MDA’s under the Minister of State,
Budget and National Planning to quickly look into Prof. Briggs Committee report
which to all intents and purposes was still a proposal in June 2022 at the
government side meeting. This assignment was to be completed with the
Presidential Committee on Salaries and Wages and given two weeks to come up
with their recommendations.
Having rounded off its work, the committee returned as
verdict: that with the Prof. Briggs Proposal of 109 -185% increase
in the university wage structure, the Federal Government will incur an
additional N560b as salaries alone, on top of the present N412b, less all other
allowances such as Earned Academic Allowances and fringe benefits, Teaching
Allowance, field trip, responsibility and post-graduate supervision allowances,
hazard allowances, which were to gulp another N170b.
In all, the sum of N1.12 Trillion will be needed to pay the
salaries and allowances of university lecturers and other staff in the
university system . At present, the wage bill of the university staff and their
colleagues in Teaching Health Systems gulp nearly 50% of the total federal government staff personnel
cost/wages. Recall too that the staff of Polytechnics and Colleges of Education
have also placed their wage review in the front burner since two months ago.
This is just like the medical doctors and the JOHESU who
have placed before the federal government, the need for wage review which the
government agrees that even with the 10% review of salary, following the
Minimum Wage and the Consequential review of 2019, her employees will need some
salary enhancement for all sectors and not just for education or health
employees alone.
Currently, the Presidential Committee on Salaries and Wages
has finished the review of the Prof.
Nimi Briggs proposal and will shortly submit same to the President. This clears
every doubt that there is an agreement before the President waiting for his
signature. There is none!
On UTAS , UPPPS and
IPPIS , Nigerians will recall that IPPIS was an inherited payment platform
meant to run side by side the corruption-ridden defunct GIFMIS platform.
However because of the issues of ghost workers, inflated personnel cost ,
non-payment of PAYE taxes by federal employees in the states to their
respective states governments, who turn around to collect these tax and the
differential from the federal government, through the Joint Tax Board,
government decided to make IPPIS payment platform sole and compulsory to all
federal government staff drawing their remunerations from the federal
government treasury.
However, ASUU and other staff of the universities complained
that IPPIS did not capture the peculiarities of the university system; that
their salaries and peculiarities like sabbatical were being amputated. ASUU had
to come up with UTAS as an alternative platform.
Subjected however to critical integrity and vulnerability
test, a bulwark against fraud during salary payment, at NITDA, it failed. It
also failed stress test. Meanwhile non-teaching staff of the universities also
came up with UPPPS, each vowing not to submit to the other, proven successful
or otherwise . But following the
tripartite plus meeting of May 12, 2022 at the Presidential Villa, NITDA was
directed to subject the three platforms of IPPIS, UTAS and UPPPS to test. The
fresh test on UTAS and on UPPPS has been concluded and results awaited while
that of IPPIS is still in the works but all will be concluded in the next one
week.
Finally, the Hon. Minister will like to use this opportunity
to once more appeal to ASUU and their
sister university unions, whose complaints had been looked into except the
ongoing renegotiation of their 2013/2014 Agreement, to go back to school,
knowing full well that these ceaseless strikes de-market our universities and
certificates therefrom, while government labours with their leaders to produce
a standard pay rise as soon as possible.
Olajide Oshundun
Head, Press and Public Relations