The latest restructuring has also seen allowances of staff working outside the sugar miller’s premises halved. PHOTO | FILE
By NEVILLE OTUKI, notuki@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Mumias Sugar Company's board has ordered deep cuts in car allowances paid to managers and supervisors starting March 1.
- Mumias managing director Coutts Otollo informed staff of the changes, part of a restructuring process initiated by the board, in an internal memo dated February 13.
- Sources indicated that the allowances of top executives, which vary according to departments, have been chopped in excess of Sh100,000 per month.
Troubled Mumias Sugar Company
has halved senior staff allowances and frozen pay increments as it
struggles to climb out of the deep pit of losses it fell into two years
ago.
The company’s board has ordered deep cuts in car allowances paid to managers and supervisors starting March 1.
Mumias managing director Coutts Otollo informed
staff of the changes, part of a restructuring process initiated by the
board, in an internal memo dated February 13.
A Sh2,200 cooking gas allowance paid to the
managers monthly has also been scrapped and the sale of sugar to staff
at subsidised prices suspended to cut costs.
The board hopes that the restructuring will help
improve the bottom line of the sugar miller whose half-year loss widened
fourfold to Sh2.08 billion in the six months to December 31, 2014.
The halving of car allowances means supervisors are now entitled to only Sh15,000 per month, down from the previous Sh30,000.
Superintendents – a rank higher than supervisors –
are now entitled to Sh31,500, down from the previous Sh63,000. Sources
indicated that the allowances of top executives, which vary according to
departments, have been chopped in excess of Sh100,000 per month.
It remains to be seen whether the reduction in
staff costs will help the miller find its footing even as it chokes with
debt and losses that have been blamed on mismanagement and irregular
import of cheap sugar that has intensified competition.
The listed company spent Sh2.2 billion on
remuneration of its 1,689 employees in the first six months of last
year, up from Sh1.9 billion in 2010, according to its annual report.
It owes seven banks more than Sh5 billion and has
opened talks aimed at reviewing the repayment schedules as it struggles
to remain afloat. The creditors include KCB, Ecobank and Dubai Bank.
Mumias is seeking to delay settlement of some of the debts by up to three or four years.
The latest restructuring has also seen allowances of staff working outside the sugar miller’s premises halved.
“The amount of travel allowance paid to staff
working out of stations is to be reviewed, but the expectation is that
this will be reduced by at least 50 per cent,” Mr Otolo’s memo reads.
Last month, Deputy President William Ruto’s meeting
with Mumias officials over a Sh1 billion government bailout package
agreed that the struggling miller halve its board to six and retrench
300 staff.
No comments :
Post a Comment