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Tuesday, September 1, 2020
Change of employment terms for Portland Cement workers
By Peterson Githaiga
Portland Cement plant in Athi-River (PHOTO: FILE)
Redundancy plans at the East African Portland Cement has entered the
final phase with 270 employees to be affected. The aim of the last phase
will involve the conversion of all permanent staff to contract terms as
the company deals with the economic repercussions of the coronavirus
pandemic.
Speaking during a consultative meeting with the permanent staff, the
acting MD Stephen Nthei said the strategic objective is to reduce
administrative costs as outlined in the turnaround strategy adopted by
the board and to comply with regulations outlined by the State
Corporations Advisory Committee.
“The Board has taken a position that we must comply with the regulatory
position to operate under a 30-70 model. This means the company should
run on 30 percent of administrative staff and 70 percent production
staff.”
“As we all know, the company has also been running in the past against
the directive by SCAC (State Corporations Advisory Committee) on the
wage bill. To this end, the Board developed a new salary structure which
is to be filed with the State Corporations Advisory Committee to ensure
compliance,” he said.
The impact of COVID-19 has also not spared the construction industry.
The industry has seen lower demand for its products, leading to
overcapacity.
“As a company, we are not in isolation from the consequences of Covid-19
which has affected the consumer purchasing power leading to a decline
in demand for cement.”
“The revenues coming out of our cement sales are not able to fully cover
all the required costs and some of them are fixed costs in nature.”
The last leg of the redundancy program will involve 270 staff ensuring
that the entire workforce is on contract terms of employment.
“Every staff will be accorded one month salary for every year worked,
there is also the issue of the notice period which is three months,
among other benefits articulated in the redundancy notice. The company
does not have funds to pay the entire amount however, the board has
started a program to raise the money. The cash arising from this will be
utilized to settling the staff obligations.”
East African Portland Cement PLC has been anchoring its potential bounce
back on the sale of its massive land holdings in Athi River valued at
Sh27.2 billion in its published 2018 Annual Report.
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