Ikeja Disco Discontinues Talks with Labour
Ikeja Electric has discontinued talks with Nigerian Labour
Congress (NLC) over the recent disengagement of workers.
The electricity distribution company stated that the
negotiation was tending towards a proposition that might jeopardise
transparency, employee performance and service excellence to customers.
Last month, Labour had picketed the Ikeja Disco for three
days over the disengagement of workers who allegedly failed to meet the
company's performance objectives and were deemed to be performing below
standard. However, the picketing was suspended after Ikeja Electric reached an
agreement with the National Union of Electricity Workers (NUEE) and NLC to set
up a committee to review the performance appraisal and competency assessment
process.
Citing the reason for its action, Ikeja Electric’s Head of
Corporate Communications, Felix Ofulue, today in Lagos explained that the
company had to discontinue the talk due to a clear determination by
representatives of Labour “to stick to a pre-conceived and irreversible
position that the process was flawed. Therefore, the review process was an
exercise in futility.”
Rather than engage in an objective and constructive review
of the whole appraisal process in line with global best practices, according to
Ofulue, Labour, he stated: “Preferred an arbitrary review in which reduced
criteria would be applied to certain selected employees who are members of the
union.”
According to the Disco Head of Corporate Communications,
“The performance review process was classified into four stages, clearly
detailing steps to be taken at each stage. However, Labour, without taking any
of these steps into consideration and any justifiable rationale, insisted the
process was flawed and demanded that Ikeja Electric must recall all disengaged
staff.
“While we remain committed to upholding best human capital
processes and stakeholder engagement in fostering excellence in the workplace,
there are indications that the propositions of certain actors in the negotiation
process are against our resolve to provide improved services to our customers
and are fixated on jeopardizing our overall interest to move the industry
forward so we had no choice but to withdraw in the interest of our consumers.”
Ofulue further noted that the electricity sector had
suffered great setback over several decades of mismanagement and stressed that
it was time to focus on applying quality human capital to salvage the
situation.
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