Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Thursday, October 27, 2016
It has emerged that the Mahama-led
National Democratic Congress (NDC) government has not paid the mandatory 5%
Tier Two Monthly deductions of public service workers since the scheme
commenced in April 2016.
According to the workers, the government was
hampering the smooth operation of the 2nd Tier Occupational Pension
Schemes in the public sector which has put the pensions of workers in danger.
The workers have therefore vowed to start
a strike action from November 15 if the NDC government fails to comply with the
statutory obligation by paying the money into the custodian banks that were
nominated by the government even against the wish of the workers.
Mahama’s Directive
At the behest of President John Mahama,
the leadership of the various workers group met the Attorney General and the
Minister of Employment and Labour Relations in May 2015 to settle the case out-of-court
which was initiated by the government against the workers over the Tier 2 scheme.
In what turned out to be consent
judgement, the government, as the employer, agreed to ensure that effective
April 1, 2016 it would transfer the 5% Tier 2 monthly deductions made by the
Controller and Accountant General and pay directly to the pension custodian
banks duly appointed by the government itself.
It was also agreed that the National
Pension Regulatory Authority (NPRA) shall ensure that the transfer of funds
currently held in the Temporary Pension Fund Account (TPFA) at the Bank of
Ghana to custodian banks of the four schemes was completed by July 2, 2016.
The government again promised to
reimburse the defendant workers “reasonable expenses incurred in setting up
their trusts and schemes, as well as any reasonable legal fees incurred in the
course of the litigation of the suit.”
Public Service Workers
However, the forum, made up of the Health
Service Workers Union (HSWU), Ghana Registered Nurses Association (GRNA), Ghana
Medical Association (GMA), Ghana Physician Assistants Association (GPAA), Ghana
Hospital and Pharmacists Association (GHOSPA), Ghana Association of Certified
Registered Anesthetists (GACRA), Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT),
Teachers and Educational Workers’ Union (TEWU) of TUC, National Association of
Graduate Teachers (NAGRAT), Coalition of Concerned Teachers (CCT) and the Civil
and Local Government Staff Association, Ghana (CLOGSAG), became incensed by the
latest development and issued the strike notice at a news conference in Accra
yesterday.
Isaac Bampoe-Addo, Executive Secretary of
CLOGSAG, who doubles as chairman of the forum for the workers said, “The delay
in transferring the 5% Tier 2 monthly deductions to custodian banks nominated
by the government itself is worrying.”
He said the leadership of the workers had
made every effort to get the audited TPFA but the government has simply denied
them, saying “As we speak we don’t know how much has accrued. The deafening
silence on the part of the government concerning the transfer of funds is
clearly in contravention of the court judgement.”
Mr. Bampoe-Addo said that the government
with the promulgation of the National Pensions (Amendment) Act, 2014 (Act 883)
postponed the implementation of the 2nd Tier Occupational Pension
Scheme for five years and that cut out those who were 55 years as at January 1,
2015, but insisted that the workers will not accept any further amendment.
“The fact still remains that for those
who fall under the National Pensions Act, 2008 (Act 766), cumulative
contributions from January 1, 2010 have not been transferred to the custodian
banks of licensed schemes of the forum.”
He said the delay in the transfer of the
funds to the various schemes for almost 7 years is going to affect adversely
the level of lump sum or gratuity a retired officer is likely to receive in the
2nd Tier.
The workers rubbished the recent
directive by Minister of Employment and Labour Relations, Haruna Iddrissu to
the Controller and Accountant General to release the fund to various custodian
banks, saying that it was only the President or the Minister of Finance, who
had that power over the Controller.
“It is a ploy. When they got intelligence
that we were going to expose them, they quickly got the minister to issue the
directive to the controller,” the workers, who wore red bands, insisted.
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