UCT to stop outsourcing

Cape Town 20-1-2015:UCT students and general workers the were marching on the Main Road to Dochester residents for student during their protest for increasing of fees for next year.Picture Mlondolozi Mbolo reporter Mpumi Kiva

Cape Town 20-1-2015:UCT students and general workers the were marching on the Main Road to Dochester residents for student during their protest for increasing of fees for next year.Picture Mlondolozi Mbolo reporter Mpumi Kiva

Published Oct 28, 2015

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Cape Town - The University of Cape Town has made an undertaking to move away from outsourcing services on its campus and to find the additional funding needed to achieve this “somehow”, it said on Wednesday.

“Last night [Tuesday], we made a commitment to the principle of insourcing. A process to determine the modalities, framework and timeframes of the implementation of this decision will need to be agreed upon by all parties involved,” vice-chancellor Max Price said in a statement released on Wednesday.

Key points of the statement was released on the university’s official twitter account.

“This decision assumes that we will have a commitment from staff and students that operations at the University of Cape Town will be allowed to return to full capacity,” Price added.

He said insourcing services would mean significantly highers costs, but the countrywide student protests against planned university fee increases had seen the university resolve to find a way to find the necessary funding.

“We are aware that insourcing will incur significant costs. The recent wave of student and worker protests at UCT and nationally – for lower fees and for insourcing workers – has emboldened us to commit to finding the money somehow. Across the institution there now appears to be widespread support for moving away from outsourcing.”

At the weekend, after the student movement forced a commitment from President Jacob Zuma last week that there would be no fee increases in 2016, an alliance of students and workers at UCT vowed to continue shutting down all operations at the university until the practice of outsourcing was ended.

UCT officially remains closed until coming Monday but the university’s communications department said it did not know when it would reopen or when deferred examinations would be written.

These had been scheduled to take place from this week to mid November.

“This entire set of exams for 27 October – 13 November will be moved to a new date, which is as yet undetermined.”

AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY

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