Popcru members seek better pay

Police administrative staff affiliated to Popcru (Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union) march in Cape Town over police salary grades on Wednesday, 29 May 2013. Picture: Nardus Engelbrecht/SAPA

Police administrative staff affiliated to Popcru (Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union) march in Cape Town over police salary grades on Wednesday, 29 May 2013. Picture: Nardus Engelbrecht/SAPA

Published May 29, 2013

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Durban - Hundreds of Popcru members demanded better pay for administrative staff in the SAPS during their march in Durban on Wednesday.

The union's KwaZulu-Natal chairman Jeff Dladla said the employer should be prepared to better workers' salaries, as the union would not accept claims that there was no money.

“We are not going to sleep as our members are earning peanuts,” Dladla said.

“This is just the beginning. We are giving the employer 14 days to respond. If they fail, we will march in Pretoria and Cape Town.”

Dladla said members of the Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union (Popcru) would not be intimidated by threats of dismissal.

“There's no amount of intimidation that will stop us from fighting for our rights.”

The protesters wanted police to honour an agreement to change their salary grades, and separate career planning for operational and administration staff.

Nicholas Duma, who had worked for the Jacobs police garage in Durban for the past 25 years as a driver and clerk, said he was earning less than R10,000 a month. He had a wife and four children and sometimes had to take out loans to make ends meet.

Popcru provincial gender co-ordinator Gretta Govender said members governed by the Public Service Act were fed up with the employer.

“We demand to be respected,” she said.

Govender said she had been working as an administration clerk at the Empangeni flying squad for eight years and said it was difficult to survive on the salary of a level three or four employee, as workers did not qualify for a bond and accommodation in government barracks.

Govender said workers wanted government to do away with the two acts that governed the SA Police Service. Police officers were governed by the SA Police Service Act and administrative workers by the Public Service Act.

“We are in the same department but ruled by different laws. It is not fair.”

According to a memorandum submitted to provincial police commissioner Lt-Gen Mamonye Ngobeni, workers wanted all Public Service Act personnel moved from salary level one to five.

Other demands included the incorporation of Public Service Act personnel into the SAPS as a category of workers, and the upgrading of supervisory clerks to level seven.

Provincial police spokesman Colonel Vincent Mdunge said police stations were functioning, as only a handful of people participated in the march. He said the protest was peaceful.

During the march Popcru members carried placards which read:

“Away with level three salaries for 20 years” and “Away with slavery packages”. - Sapa

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