The National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission (NSIWC)on Wednesday
declared that the Federal Government would not pay salaries of staff schools in
the nation’s tertiary institutions.
The Executive Chairman of the
Commission, Chief Richard Egbule, made this known at a news briefing in Abuja.
The University workers under the
aegis of the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU) had
threaten to embark on strike for non-funding of staff schools by the Federal
Government.
Egbule said the proposed strike
action by SSANU was uncalled for as government was not responsible for the
funding of staff schools in higher institutions.
He said that some government-owned
tertiary institutions had transferred the funding of staff schools established
by them to government treasury.
This, he said, had contributed to
the bloating of the recurrent cost of federal government budget.
Egbule said that the activities of
some of the staff schools had resulted in the additional cost to government
amounting to N4 billion annually.
He said that in a bid to find out
the state of the staff schools, the commission had in 2013 carried out a survey
on their operations.
Egbule said that this was done with
a view to generating information on the funding and payment of salaries.
He said that the study revealed that
48 of the tertiary institutions did not have staff schools, while 21 funded
their staff schools from their Internally Generated Revenue (IGR).
He said 51 of the institutions,
however, funded their staff schools from the Federal Treasury.
Egbule said that the schools that
funded their staff schools from the federal treasury had devised means of
including the staff list of such schools as part of the tertiary institutions’
authentic staff.
He said the staff of such schools
were wrongly placed on the salary structure meant for the tertiary educational
institutions.
Egbule said that the salary
structure was higher in quantum than the Consolidated Public Service Salary
Structure (CONPSS).
He said that the discovery of the
commission had resulted in government taking a policy decision.
He said the decision was that the
cost of running all staff schools of government agencies including staff
remuneration were to be funded from the higher institutions’ IGR.
The executive chairman said that in
a bid to implement the federal government decision, the commission had in 2014,
issued a circular directing all relevant institutions to adhere to government
policy on funding of staff schools.
He said that the reiteration of the
policy was one of the on-going activities of the commission in assisting the
government to reduce the growing personnel cost and recurrent expenditure.
He, therefore, called on the staff
unions not to distract the new administration with unnecessary demands.
Egbule said the federal government
had reached an agreement with staff unions of tertiary educational institutions
between 2009 and 2010 on funding of staff schools. (NAN)

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