South African Municipal Workers' Union Explained

SAMWU
Location Country:South Africa
Affiliation:COSATU, PSI
Members:160,000
Full Name:South African Municipal Workers' Union
Founded:1987
Headquarters:Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa
Key People:Nelson Mokgotho, President
Koena Ramatlou, General Secretary
Papikie Mohale, National Spokesperson
Website:www.samwu.org.za

The South African Municipal Workers Union (SAMWU) is the largest union in local government in South Africa.

History

The union was founded on 24 October 1987, when the Municipal Workers' Union of South Africa merged with the Cape Town Municipal Workers' Association (CTMWA), and the municipal workers' sections of General Workers' Union of South Africa, South African Allied Workers' Union and Transport and General Workers' Union. All of these unions were affiliates of the Congress of South African Trade Unions, to which SAMWU also affiliated. In later years, SAMWU absorbed the Durban Indian Municipal Employees' Society and the Union of Johannesburg Municipal Workers.[1]

Initially, the union grew rapidly, and by 1994 it had 100,410 members, 31.3% of all eligible workers.[2] The union led opposition to privatisation schemes, and was particularly active in opposing the privatisation of a water treatment plant in Johannesburg. In 2002, it led a national three-week strike for higher wages.[3]

In 2009, the union's leadership was voted out, and disagreements around this led the Democratic Municipal and Allied Workers' Union of South Africa and the Municipal and Allied Trade Union of South Africa to split away over the next few years. The leadership lost a vote of confidence in 2019 and were replaced. The new leaders found that the union was insolvent, with some having been spent on legal costs and some was used for inappropriate purposes. In addition, membership was in decline.[4] [5] In 2020, the union declared that it might withdraw support for the African National Congress government.[6]

Membership of the union is open to South African workers employed, directly or indirectly, in local authorities, water utilities and allied undertakings of the economy whether in the public, private or voluntary sector, including: public administrative services in municipalities and local authorities, health and social services, libraries, cultural and other community services, water and sanitation, solid-waste management and environmental services, road construction and storm-water drainage, electricity generation and distribution, public transportation and traffic control, telecommunication and information services, scientific and technical services, and parks and recreation.

Leadership

General Secretaries

1987: John Ernstzen

1990s: Roger Ronnie

Walter Theledi

2015: Simon Mathe

2019: Koena Ramotlou

2021: Dumisane Magagula

Presidents

1987: Petrus Mashishi

2009: Sam Molope

Pule Molalenyane

2019: John Dlamini

2020: Nelson Mokgotho

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Musi . Mojalefa . Evaluating IMATU and SAMWU policy responses to Igoli 2002 . 2010 . University of the Witwatersrand . Johannesburg.
  2. Book: Catchpowle . Lesley . A Case Study of the South African Municipal Workers' Union (SAMWU) in the Western Cape (1992-1997) . 2002 . University of Greenwich . Greenwich . 18 March 2021.
  3. News: Majavu . Anna . Wycliff Mabusela: fighting corruption in unions . 2 May 2021 . New Frame . 30 April 2021.
  4. News: Mahlakoana . Theto . SAMWU ADMITS IT IS INSOLVENT AS IT BATTLES TO PAY SALARIES . 19 March 2021 . Eyewitness News . 10 April 2019.
  5. News: Samwu 'notes' allegations of grand-scale looting of workers' funds . 19 March 2021 . Independent Online . 21 May 2019.
  6. News: Samwu is questioning its support of the ANC . 19 March 2021 . Business Day . 9 December 2020.