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'Safety first, AA later'

Jan 24 2008 19:40

Pretoria - A Pretoria High Court Judge on Thursday criticised the Tshwane Municipality for putting equity transformation above safety considerations.


Judge Bill Prinsloo interdicted the municipality from imposing any disciplinary sanction on one of its senior electrical engineers, Adrianus Weyers, for sending a letter of concern about his bosses' employment equity policy - which he said endangered city employees and the public - to the Engineering Council and the department of labour in 2005.


"I see no provision in the Employment Equity Act to the effect that non-designated (white) candidates should be excluded altogether. According to the preamble, the Act aims to promote "the constitutional right of equity and the exercise of true democracy" and eliminate "unfair discrimination in employment".


"...I fail to see how I can express approval for actions aimed at achieving (and accelerating) equity transformation at all costs and in disregard of safety considerations.


"This must be particularly true in the case of a lethal commodity like high voltage electricity.


"In my view there must be a sensible balance between considerations of employment equity on the one side and safety on the other side," the Judge said.


Careful selection


Weyers first raised his concerns with his seniors - and as a last resort wrote the letters, after being forced to appoint under-qualified black electricians to perform dangerous operations instead of better qualified whites.


Weyers was not only suspended for sending the letter, which the council insisted "put them in a bad light", but was thereafter also found guilty of "improper conduct" for sending the letter without prior approval.


He obtained a temporary interdict to stop his disciplinary hearing before he could be sentenced and then turned to the High Court for final relief, insisting that he had only been doing his duty as a professional engineer when he sent the letters.


Judge Prinsloo said it was clear that the work of system operators was significantly more dangerous and had greater potential negative implications for power supply to consumers than the work done by electricians employed in other parts of the municipality's electrical division.


Operators had to be carefully selected to ensure that they had the necessary technical and safety knowledge and operational adequacy. It was the insistence of Weyers' managers that only employment equity (black) candidates would be considered and that he must appoint operators whom he felt simply did not have the necessary skills that moved him to write the letters.


Weyers insisted that appointing incompetent candidates was in breach of his obligations as a professional engineer.


Genuine concerns


Judge Prinsloo said there was no shortage of motivation for short listing only white candidates. Nevertheless sincere efforts were made by all concerned, before the intervention of the then newly-appointed electrical development manager, Benny Mahlangu, to compile an equity friendly short list.


He said Mahlangu had, however, not been "sensitive" and paid no regard to his own employer's equity policy. The last thing on his mind was the safety of employees or members of the public. It was only equity that mattered.


The judge found that Weyers' concerns were genuine, that he had a duty to pay due regard to public safety considerations as a professional person.


He had not made the disclosures for personal gain, was reasonable in doing so and had acted in the public interest.


Weyers had acted in good faith and had the reasonable belief that the actions of his employer endangered, or were likely to endanger the safety or health of the public or fellow employees.


He could not legally be held liable for writing the letter and his disciplinary sanction was therefore unlawful, Judge Prinsloo found.

 

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Fubar
May 19 2008 11:48 Report this comment

They are actually all racists since they are employing people on RACE and not SKILL level! This just proves the point. It is funny that the black MAJORITY is being defended so strongly from the white MINORITY...anyone know of another place in the world where this is the case. I have to laugh since all they are proving here is that we were right all along...given the same oppertunity on the same level as anyone else they just can't get up the mast without help (I personally wish this was different since SA would be a different country). And this is the case in all of Africa...not just SA. They legislate what they cannot control to force people into submission. Democracy where all are equal?? DemoCRAZY more like it!
 
Nasdaq7
Jan 25 2008 13:59 Report this comment

During Apartheid, 70% or more of the work force in businesses were black. Today if you walk into any Pick n Pay, Game, Dions or you name it: municipality or other government controlled business, 100% of the tellers, middle managers and sometimes even top managers are black. Even during the darkest days of Apartheid the ratio of black and white workers never reached a 100:0% ratio. Therefore, should I leave South Africa, it will always provide me with the greatest pleasure knowing the black man was a far greater racist than the white man ever could be.
 
Flip Crouse
Jan 25 2008 13:55 Report this comment

Thanks Lord that we still have Judges on the Bank who are sensible. Equity is not supposed to jeopardise the entity, but unfortunately there are many ignorant people who do not wish to challenge the system in fear of prejudice. I congratulate the Judge who did apply his mind to the contents of the case and not to the charged.
 
baleni
Jan 25 2008 13:26 Report this comment

i agree with Yam as well, Retired all people who go to college think they know everything, it isnt a "black" problem, but a youth/inexperiance problem
 
Jo
Jan 25 2008 09:26 Report this comment

Ho hum, yawn, AA? Let us be honest: how many jobseekers ADMIT that they are actually AA candidates? Okay, so if they do not want to admit it, then surely there is something inherently embarrassing about it? Certainly the iniquitous practices of our past should be addressed, equitably, fairly, humanely. But the way AA is being applied (like BBBEE) is an invitation to nepotism, corruption, and rank racialism.
 
Retired
Jan 25 2008 08:10 Report this comment

I would like to agree with Yam but it is often easier said than done. From personal experience I tried that approach but the black candidates I had knew everything because he had been to college. The blacks didn't think they needed any further training. They had their rights of AA!
 
Yam
Jan 25 2008 07:59 Report this comment

Personally I'd hire the experienced white candidate and two deserving black candidates with great potential and make it a condition of the white candidate's job to teach the black candidates. Its the only way we are going to extricate ourselves from this disastrous situation. Nobody ever sees the bigger picture! If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem.
 
Retired
Jan 25 2008 07:54 Report this comment

The incompetence of the ANC (Power cuts their fault) and its racist policies will be the downfall of SA. I bailed out from the madness of AA incompetents by retiring early. Instead of bringing the level of safety up the ANC (they are in charge of the government) want to bring it down due to stupidity. SAfety incpmpetence appears to be conflicting with their own Minister of Safety. How can you screw a company with this racist policy of employing the wrong candidate simply because he has to be black? We will soon be reaching the incompence level of our neighbours with the inflation to match!
 
 
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