Kwara State Government signs N30,000 minimum wage agreement with schools, tertiary institutions’ workers

Kwara State Government on Monday signed an agreement with the Joint Public Service Negotiating Council on the implementation of the N30,000 minimum wage and consequential adjustment for non-teaching staff at the Colleges of Education, Kwara State Polytechnic and College of Arabic and Islamic Legal Studies.

Kwara State Government signs N30,000 minimum wage agreement with schools, tertiary institutions’ workers

Kwara State Government on Monday signed an agreement with the Joint Public Service Negotiating Council on the implementation of the N30,000 minimum wage and consequential adjustment for non-teaching staff at the Colleges of Education, Kwara State Polytechnic and College of Arabic and Islamic Legal Studies.

The agreement, among other things, set the effective date for the implementation of the new minimum wage covering the concerned workers at the tertiary institutions on July 1, 2022.

Recall that the state government had started the implementation of minimum wage for workers on grade level 1-6 while it subsequently signed the consequential adjustment for senior staff on grade level 07-17 in the state civil service.

The non-teaching staff in the state tertiary institutions’ deal also provided that the government should, in subsequent wage review, include the unions at the tertiary institutions in the committee for negotiations on behalf of workers and moderate subvention payment process to enable payment of workers at the tertiary institutions as and when due; and that there should be no retrenchment of workers as a result of the implementation of the minimum wage.

“We are gathered here to sign the last bit of the N30,000 minimum wage and consequential adjustment for non-teaching staff at the Colleges of Education, Kwara State Polytechnic and College of Arabic and Islamic Legal Studies. I want to say thank you to these unions for being considerate,” the Head of Service, Mrs Modupe Oluwole, said at the signing of the agreement at the Governor’s Office, Ilorin.

“This agreement is made this 25th day of July, 2022 between the Kwara State Government and the Joint Public Service Negotiation Council Kwara State Organ, on behalf of Senior Staff Union in Colleges of Education Nigeria and Non-Academic Staff Union, on the implementation of Consolidated Tertiary Education Institutions Salary Structure.

“Everyone knows the situation of things today in the country. Many states in the country are finding it very difficult to pay the necessary wages, including Kwara. But His Excellency, Mallam AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq has made the payment of salaries the first line of charge to ensure that all salaries are paid as and when due. The governor has promised not to renege on the agreement,” she said.

“Governor AbdulRazaq recognises the fact that workers are key and they need their pay, and he is doing all he can to ensure that workers get paid. Almost everything that comes to the state goes to the payment of salaries. We have states that are counting months of unpaid salaries but the situation is not like that in Kwara State.

“The government appreciates you and we are not taking this lightly. We will continue to do our best to encourage workers. We know some states started paying the minimum wage but could not continue. We thank God for the kind of governor we have in the state.”

The State Chairman of NLC, Comrade Isa Ore, commended the governor, the head of service and other key stakeholders in the struggle for achieving the feat.

“Today, another landmark achievement was made here in the history of Kwara State. Minimum wage and consequential agreements were signed for the education sector. The workers in Kwara State are known to be patient and we have mutual understanding with the state government. In the next few years, another minimum wage will come on board,” Ore said.

The Chairman, Senior Staff Union in Colleges of Education Nigeria (SSUCOEN), Comrade Love Adeyemi, applauded AbdulRazaq for showing sincere commitment to the welfare of the Kwara workers.