Lonmin seeks sustainable peace at Marikana
Lonmin, Moneyweb, 25 August
2012
Management is focused on
reaching a peace accord.
The week of national mourning and the
moving memorial events at Marikana on Thursday, have been vital in bringing
calm, and a time for reflection and remembrance.
It has also created the space for unity.
All stakeholders agreed in ceremonies this week that it is time to move forward
and begin the gradual journey back to normality.
Lonmin's management is committed to this
process and its absolute focus in the coming days will be to reach a peace
accord, under the auspices of the Department of Labour, which allows for a
peaceful return to work and an environment in which the concerns of all
stakeholders can be addressed.
Simon Scott, Acting CEO, said: “We
welcome the Department of Labour’s efforts in facilitating the peace accord and
we congratulate the Department and all participants in this regard. It is clear
that everyone involved wants to move forward. We are dealing with tragic
and challenging issues, and will be for a long time to come, but for the sake
of the Company, its many thousands of employees and the industry which supports
them we need to find a sustainable peace accord which allows people to return
to a working business. That we are committed to doing in the coming days.”
The company has always said, and maintains,
that it will discuss the strikers’ demands in the normal way, through their
unions within the agreements which the company and all unions involved have
signed up to, but that requires the unprotected action to end. It has never
refused to consider their demands.
The week of mourning which began on Monday,
announced by the President of the Republic of South Africa, and the memorial
events of yesterday (Thursday) have been an opportunity for calm, reflection
and remembrance. Lonmin agrees with union leaders who spoke at yesterday’s
memorial events that next week marks an opportunity to begin the journey back
to normality which is vital for the Company’s 28,000 employees, and for the
country, and is grateful for their call for the Company to be supported, for
the sake of their members. Clearly, achieving normality
will be a long journey given the terrible events of the last two weeks,
but without a return to work that journey cannot start.
Lonmin, alongside the Unions, will
continue to communicate to its wider workforce over the weekend,
asking employees to report for work as normal on Monday.
The Company has also been asked to provide
clarity on wages after a number of conflicting reports.
In order to ensure that Lonmin wages are
market related, the Company undertook research to assess the wage level in the
industry. Based on these findings, Lonmin took a decision to implement a
drilling allowance of R750 per month for the RDOs, a practice which
occurs in the mining industry. This brings the RDO guaranteed wage to just
shy of R10,000 per month and is in line with other industry participants.
In addition, the RDOs can earn performance bonuses. The average bonus earned is
R1,500, but some are in the order of R6,000.
In the five years from 2007 to 2011,
the RDOs were granted a cumulative pay rise of 62%. This compares
with a cumulative 45% for level D managers and 34% for level E
managers over the same period. A complete salary breakdown is shown in
Table 1.
Table 1:
Complete RDO salary breakdown
 
 Basic Pension
(14.83%) Medical Housing Holiday Leave Allowance RDO Allowance TOTAL 
RDO R 5,405.00 R 801.56 R 556.00 R 1,850.00 R 450.42 R750.00 R 9,812.98 
 
The Company also wishes to reiterate its
long-standing and total commitment to achieving the targets set for it within
South Africa’s updated Mining Charter.
The Mining Charter is a huge
undertaking, and the sector still has a long way to go, but we have said
repeatedly that our performance in this area is part of our licence to operate,
not only legally but also morally. As a company, Lonmin is proud of its
achievements to date:
• Housing
We estimate that approximately 50% of
people living in a fifteen kilometre radius of our operations are housed in
informal dwellings with little or no access to basic services, and suspect that
this will include a significant number of our employees who choose not to spend
their housing allowance on accommodation provided by the Company but to live
elsewhere.
The Lonmin human settlement strategy
consists of three elements: hostel conversion, the existing Marikana Housing
and the long term housing programme. To date, Lonmin has invested R250
million on upgrading mining accommodation and converting
old-style hostels into new-style single and family units, including the present
FY2012.
We are committed to converting and
upgrading our four hostels to achieve the occupancy rate of one person per room
as well as converting and upgrading some into family units and we plan to have
converted our hostel space into a cumulative total of 2,790 units
(824 family and 1,966 single) by 2014.
In 2011 we met our target, converting
26 hostel blocks into 542 bachelor and 104 family units and saw 179 employees
become owners of homes which were sold through the Marikana Housing Development
Company.
We have completed 1,728 properties to date.
The provision of mass affordable housing however will remain a major
challenge, but one we are committed to meeting.
• Black Economic Empowerment
The Charter also provides targets for both
Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) and for Historically Disadvantaged South
Africans (HDSAs).
Shanduka, our BEE partner, has an 18%
equity interest in Western Platinum Ltd and Eastern Platinum Ltd. We are
committed to achieving 26% ownership by the Charter’s requirement of
2015.
• Human Resource Development
In 2011 we spent $29m on human resources
development programmes, including adult basic education training and equipping
young people living in the areas around our mines with the skills to work for
us. The Lonmin Artisan College is a key part of this.
Our recruitment policy gives preference to
HDSA candidates and amongst permanent employees 46.5% of management
is categorised as HDSA, including white women.
• Water supply
Lonmin has provided water reticulation
in Oustad, which has enabled yard connections for 407 households.
As we move towards calm and stability,
Lonmin expresses its appreciation for the support and encouragement that we
have received following the tragic events which occurred at Marikana.

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