By Bola Bamigbola (Punch)
Working for three years without salary can be distressing especially for married persons with several demands to meet. But that seemed to have been the plight of outsourced workers comprising security guards, gardeners and cleaners at the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital, Ile-Ife, Osun State.
Saturday PUNCH gathered that the last salary received by this category of workers was in May, 2017. Also, from a document by the leadership of the Environmental Health Service Providers Association of Nigeria, the supervisory body of the workers, there are 556 workers in the hospital.
A breakdown of the figure shows that 174 are cleaners and gardeners, while 382 are security guards. The highest paid workers receive N15, 000 monthly.
The workers are still hoping for the payment of the owed salary even as they continued making efforts to draw attention of the relevant authorities to their plight.
Our correspondent learnt that the affected workers at the tertiary healthcare facility enjoyed regular salary payment from 2007 when they were contracted until 2012 when the contractors were reduced to 12.
But sometime in 2014 however, there were indications of looming trouble when the workers were owed salary for a year. But respite came in 2015 after the outstanding months were paid.
But since May 2017, Saturday PUNCH gathered that all the affected workers had been left with memories of the good old days. Four of them, including a director, had reportedly died within the period, while a cleaner was said to have lost her 22-year old son, owing to her inability to raise money for test and operation.
Eleven of the cleaners were said to be down with various ailments and one of the affected workers reportedly lost an eye to a sickness.
Investigation by Saturday PUNCH revealed that the workers were employed by some contractors relating with the hospital on their behalf.
It was further gathered that anytime there was delay in the release of fund to the hospital from the Federal Government, the management usually paid the workers from its Internally Generated Revenue.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, one of the contractors, said the matter reached its peak in 2017 following the implementation of the Treasury Single Account, which successfully blocked all alternative means the management explored in the past to pay the workers.
EHSPAN leadership petitions Osinbajo, SGF
However, the workers, under the aegis of EHSPAN, have petitioned the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo and the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha.
In the petition jointly signed by its chairman, Prince Aderounmu Aderemi, and Secretary, Chief Dipo Eluwole, the workers said they were owed 32-month salary totalling N400m by the hospital and pleaded for intervention.
The letter read, “We, the underlisted are the representatives of both security and cleaning services providers otherwise known as outsourced contractors at the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital Complex, providing aforementioned services at the various arms of the institution in the last 10 years.
“We are constrained to inform you of the current indebtedness of the institution amounting to over N400m (four hundred million) in the past 32 months to the various organisations engaged to provide these essential services.
“The effects of the non-payment of this outstanding on our cleaners/service providers and operations cannot be over-emphasised.
“Information at our disposal indicates that apart from the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital Complex and the University of Ibadan Teaching Hospital, other Federal Government-owned health institutions are paying outsourced contractors as and when due.
“We have collectively resolved to appeal and request that you kindly use your good offices to wade into this matter urgently to prevent the currently deprived, impoverished and agitated workers from taking the law into their own hands.”
Speaking further on the plight of the workers, Eluwole exonerated the university management of wrongdoing regarding the non-payment of the workers.
He stated that the workers were ready to leave the hospital but their outstanding salary should be paid.
According to him, at last count, four of the workers have died and others are living in abject poverty.
He said, “We got the contract for the cleaning, clearing and security services in the hospital in April, 2007, via government directive that all teaching hospitals in the country should outsource the services.
“Since then our services were paid for, as and when due until 2014 when lapses occurred in the payment for almost a year. But in year 2015, government cleared the outstanding.
“In May 2017, the Ministry of Finance invited all the outsourced contractors in the South-West to a verification exercise at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital. The authorities of all the teaching hospitals in the South-West were also invited.
“Representatives of the Ministry of Finance and Health came from Abuja for the verification. After the verification, only one month was paid and since then, nothing has been paid to us as salary.
“When we met the CMD, he said issue of non-payment of outsourced contractors usually topped their discussion each time the CMDs hold meeting in Abuja and yet no solution in sight. The most worrying aspect of it is that the cleaners are paid N15, 000 monthly. The amount is not up to the minimum wage.”
Asked the profit of the outsourced contractors in the arrangement, Eluwole said government paid the workers N15, 000 monthly while the contractors got seven per cent of the amount for their services.
Saying non-payment of the workers constituted a threat to other workers in the hospital, Eluwole added that some of them in anger threatened to enter the newly renovated isolation centre on the hospital premises to contract coronavirus and spread it.
Efforts to get the reaction of the OAUTH management on the issue were futile as the hospital’s Chief Medical Director, Prof. Victor Adetiloye, declined to comment on the matter when our correspondent contacted him on his mobile.