Commuters were stranded, yesterday, when Lagos Bus Rapid
Transport, BRT’s drivers and ticketers on the Ikorodu-CMS route downed tools
over unpaid salaries and unfavourable condition of service. lamata The BRT
scheme, operated by Primero Transport Services Ltd., began operation in
November 2015 and has 434 buses on its fleet; and more than 2,000 staff. It was
gathered that the workers convened an emergency meeting at about 5.45a.m. at
the loading station, after which they converged on the bus corridor and
barricaded it. The protest was orderly. Their grouse Some of the workers, who
spoke to Vanguard, lamented that their terms of service had been reversed, with
salaries slashed from N60,000 to N45,000. A driver, Mr. Julius Adejire, said:
“We are still waiting for our July salaries. The funny thing is that as at
Monday evening, we discovered that some other staffers, including the engineers
and ground staff, have been receiving salaries alerts. Can we drive this bus on
empty stomach?’’ Adejire said that apart from delayed salaries, the drivers
wanted improved welfare and working conditions. He said: “The policy guiding
our job is another issue; we are working like slaves because as a driver you
cannot stop to ease yourself or have break time. “We are supposed to be doing
40 hours in a week, but they cowed us into doing 48 hours with just one off day
instead of two. “We have been tolerating them because we believe this is a new
project that needs to be supported, but the situation is getting tougher. “We
don’t even know where we are heading; the buses are still new. Is it when the
buses go bad that they will pay us? “In our appointment letter, they said we
will receive N60,000 as basic salary and N20,000 as performance bonus. After
five months they changed it to N40,000 basic and N40,000 bonus with a lot of
conditions. ‘We sleep under bridge’ “They are trying to instil discipline when
there is no staff bus or accommodation arrangement for drivers who come from as
far as Sango-Ota, Badagry and Agbara.” He added that drivers, who could not
afford to sleep on the bridge near the BRT bus shelter, pay N500 daily to sleep
in a nearby church. He said: “They should revert to the agreement on our
appointment letter and also tell us the exact day of the month we will be
receiving our salaries. “This is the only job we depend on, but the salary is
often delayed, so how do we survive? We don’t collect pension even if you work
for 10 years.” Mgt’s reaction The company’s Managing Director, Mr. Fola Tinubu,
said the delay in salaries payment was due to an error on the part of the bank
handling the disbursement. He said: “It is really due to an error and we have
corrected it. The money was paid yesterday (Monday). So why they are doing this
beats me, because the money should be in their accounts by now.” On the
allegation of reviewed salary structure, Tinubu said the company’s management
took the decision to instil discipline in the protesting drivers. He said:
“When I took over, they were being paid a basic salary of N60,000 and bonus of
N20,000, but nobody was being paid the bonus. “So I thought it was unfair for
them not to get their bonus and I made sure they get their bonus. “However, we
discovered that majority of them were not conscientious and when they take the
buses out they just park somewhere and don’t work. “So we decided to shift the
salary to N40,000 and the bonus to N40,000; it is same amount. “We are not
trying to take money away from them, but we don’t want to pay people that will
not work and we don’t want those people in the system anyway. “The way the
country is today you cannot expect us to be paying people that don’t want to
work. So that’s the genesis of the whole issue.” Commuters stranded Meanwhile,
some stranded passengers expressed their disappointment and urged the Lagos State
Government to intervene in the matter in the interest of commuters and
residents of Lagos as commercial buses used the opportunity to increase their
fares on the route. Mr. Hakeen Abdulraham, an insurance broker, said: “The
buses have been a sort of life saver, especially for residents of Ikorodu
because of the comfort and relatively cheaper fares. “But I was shocked when I
got to the bus terminal early today (yesterday) to discover that the buses had
yet to arrive at 6.30a.m. “It is quite disappointing that this is happening at
a time when the economy is biting hard as some of the yellow-painted commercial
buses (Danfo) may want to take undue advantage of the situation to hike their
fares.”
Wednesday 10 August 2016
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment