Category: Press Release

  • COST OF LIVING ALLOWANCE SHOULD NOT BE THE ONLY REASON TO GO ON STRIKE – ATAG

    COST OF LIVING ALLOWANCE SHOULD NOT BE THE ONLY REASON TO GO ON STRIKE – ATAG

    We want to acknowledge the positive agitation that is growing on the teaching front and we welcome the uproar. The cost of living in Ghana is unbearable and this call has come far too late. With this, we give our support to the wind of agitation and encourage every teacher to join the movement to put pressure on the government to do the needful.

    However, we find the call to go on strike over “Cost of Living Allowance” as insufficient and cannot withstand the test of time in demanding our rightful place as professionals. The president reiterated that “teachers are not meant to be millionaires” some few months ago and if we want to exert any form of pressure it should not be done on weak fundamentals. We understand the cost of living allowance will only be negotiated within a time frame and once the economy bounced back, the government is obliged to put it on hold.

    We have many concerns as teachers. Our conditions of service are poor and we continue to be treated as the second choice among all other professionals. This period is giving us the fine opportunity to once and for all bear our teeth to the government in a manner that will help address all our pertinent and legitimate concerns immediately. We must not put our eggs in one basket and pretend the government will listen to us whilst other serious concerns and issues beg for attention.

    (a) We want GNAT, NAGRAT and CCT-GH leaders to understand that negotiating for an increment in our salary is non-negotiable and this is the ripe time to push all our energies into demanding for salary increment once and for all.

    (b) We do not think the leadership of GNAT, NAGRAT and CCT-GH is oblivion of the fact that if the COLA is granted, it may force the government not to consider any other form of salary increment since the economy is already bad. The government will be tempted to elude us any form of increment if even if it decides to give us 10% of this COLA which is temporal. Teachers will be happy with a permanent 15% increase in their salary immediately than a COLA that is subjected to a period.

    (c) Again, the government through GES has failed to honour certain privileges due to teachers. These privileges include promotion, incremental jumps, study leave with or without pay, re-engagement and other hosts of allowances. We want this current strike to capture these issues as well because our suffering as teachers is partly due to the refusal of our employer to adhere to granting various privileges to us.

    (d) We do not think that GNAT, NAGRAT and CCT-GH are encouraging teachers to go on strike to save their image after many threats to the government over the TM1 laptop did not yield results. As it stands, primary school teachers are yet to receive their laptops. Going on strike over one issue is insufficient to put legitimate pressure on the government. Primary school teachers need their laptops from which their CPD allowance had been deducted already for it.

    Ladies and gentlemen, the time for real pressure is now and we caution the leadership of GNAT, NAGRAT, and CCT-GH not to sound a wrong trumpet and turn around to blame the government for ineptitude and bad faith.
    The time is now for teachers to break the chains of marginalization and unprofessional treatment and we urge every one of us to take his or her destiny into his or her hands rather than relying solely on leaders of GNAT, NAGRAT and CCT-GH that we cannot wholeheartedly trust in fighting the REAL COURSE FOR TEACHERS.

    ARISE TEACHERS! ARISE NOW FOR YOUR DIGNITY!!

    …Signed…
    Albert Dadson Amoah
    General Secretary

  • THE GOVERNMENT IS NOT BEING FAIR WITH THE NEWLY POSTED TEACHERS – ALL TEACHERS ALLIANCE GHANA (ATAG)

    THE GOVERNMENT IS NOT BEING FAIR WITH THE NEWLY POSTED TEACHERS – ALL TEACHERS ALLIANCE GHANA (ATAG)

    We want to state that the government of Ghana is not being fair with the newly trained teachers who had been posted to various places of their service since February 2022. Six months down the line, these newly trained teachers are yet to receive their identification numbers and let alone go to the ministry of finance to take their biometrics for onward payment of salary. In times when public sector workers are crying for Cost of Living Allowance (COLA), the government has largely remained deaf ear to all appeals.

    Sadly, we have left these young professionals to struggle in the face of general hardships prevailing in the country. Some of them can hardly meet their daily upkeep whilst others are resorting to excessive borrowing to survive. This is affecting them both psychologically and economically and affecting their quality of state of mind. Many of these young professionals are starving at their various stations and the level of economic and psychological torture is unbearable for them. It is sad teacher unions had remained silent knowing very well that it is not easy for these young ones. Since 2017, newly trained teachers had been paid three months after postings, so what is going on this time around?

    The government’s call for quality education will virtually become a mirage because it lacks the necessary urgency toward pressing issues that confront the sector. Educational policies and infrastructure development cannot alone give us the necessary positive impact if we treat teachers with this level of contempt. All the good efforts of the government towards achieving world-class educational quality and meeting the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4 will crumble when teachers are treated as an afterthought in policy making and implementation.

    We appeal to GES and the Ministry of Education, with all due respect, to as a matter of urgency, attend to the predicaments of these newly trained teachers who had been left hopeless and suffering in their various stations. Government should not wait to hear some of them lose their lives out of frustrations or sinking into perpetual desperation before moving to their rescue. The country’s economic situation is not good for every public sector worker and if we should leave these new professionals in their current situation, we deny them their rights and treat them unfairly for no fault of theirs. The government had no justification whatsoever to say he has no money to pay these newly posted trained teachers on time rather than leaving them suffering against their will. We maintain that it is not fair.

    …Signed…
    Albert Dadson Amoah
    General Secretary
    0509639374 /0249403277/ 0543981951

  • IMPLEMENTATION OF THE FREE SHS POLICY: AN ALTERNATIVE

    ALL TEACHERS ALLIANCE GHANA

    We want to commend the President once again for his bold step in implementing the free SHS policy. Though it was met with great deal of opposition due to the cost involve and unavailable infrastructure, he took the bull by the horn and implemented the program knowing very well the challenges that come with it.

    Currently, after the implementation of the policy, we have come to the crossroad. A decision that has left the whole nation talking and the ministry with headache. We do not blame the minister since it is his job to work for the betterment of the nation, he proposed the double track system as a means to absorb the numbers that may turn out in the next academic year.

    For this reason many have raised red flag over the system: the feasibility and the further challenges that may accompany it.
    We in the All Teachers Alliance Ghana (ATAG) have said that the tracking system will put enormous pressure on both teachers and students as well as parents due to limited duration involve.
    We have also expressed reservations about the fact that there could be further exams failures, malpractices etc going forward.
    Many other think tanks and analysts have raised similar and other concerns.

    Against this background that, ATAG is proposing an alternative to the implementation of the free SHS policy that will ease the pressure that is currently besetting it.

    We believe that the wholesale implementation of the Free SHS policy in all second cycle institutions need to be reconsidered. We therefore strongly believe that VARIANT POLICY will suffice better since many parents in Ghana can afford to pay for their wards education.

    What we mean by VARIANT is that all the public SHS should be graded or categorised into A – D schools based on certain matrix that looks at the resources available in the school, the reputation, location and calibre or background of students.
    All Grade A schools, for instance could be the First Class schools with full blown facilities and infrastructure and let say all Grade D schools could be pure community schools.

    People in Grade A schools for instance will be allowed to pay fees less 20%, Grade B less 40%, Grade C less 60% while Grade D will automatically enjoy free SHS.
    To avoid discrimination, brilliant and needy students who are placed in Category/Grade A and B schools could apply for scholarship to be able to enjoy 100% free policy.

    We believe that the VARIANT SYSTEM will solve most of the problems we are trying to swerve: cost and numbers.

    1. The quality that has ever existed in some First Class schools in Ghana won’t be compromised. We must try not to jeopardize that standard and reputation in these schools.

    2. Government could get ample time to upgrade lower grade schools. Grade C and D schools will get the opportunity to receive more resources to improve upon their quality.

    3. The numbers will be checked because more students by default won’t ennrol for reasons better known to them.

    4. Private schools may also absorb some numbers who might not get the opportunity to be placed in their choice schools.

    There’s no policy implementation that is without challenges. We believe this variant system might have its own difficulties but we in ATAG believe its prospects far outweigh the wholesale implementation of the policy.

    We are appealing to all stakeholders to consider this our alternative proposal and take it into consideration before we cripple our SHS education system with uncertainties.

    We want to admonish our good minister to take caution on his step of implementing the double track system and also to seek thorough advice from stakeholders, policy analysts and think tanks as well as considering other possible alternatives before any form of enrollment. We are not against the double track system but our hopes of getting the quality are vague.

    Long Live Ghana!
    Long Live Teachers!
    Long Live Teachers Unions!

    …signed…
    Isaac Ofori
    National Chairman
    0249403277

    Albert Dadson Amoah
    General Secretary
    0509639374

    Abraham Arhin
    Communication Director
    0249893511

  • STATEMENT FROM THE ALL TEACHERS ALLIANCE GHANA CONCERNING THE SIC INSURANCE POLICY

    [vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    TO: ALL MEDIA HOUSE

    27/06/2018

    On the early hours of Tuesday, 26th June, 2018, teachers woke up in the morning only to be greeted with some ¢10 SIC insurance policy deduction on their payslips.
    This had come to us as a surprise because majority of us knew nothing about it.

    We believe this is utterly insult to the service and we do not know who and who arrived at the conclusion that teachers lives can be bettered through ¢10 insurance policy.
    What is even dangerous is that we learnt the government is subsidizing this policy and is offering a so called premium.

    We are wondering which of the parties: government, GES or Teacher Unions, initiated the process and why teachers were not briefed on the policy before enrollment. We think this kind of treatment meted out to teachers all the time symbolizes how low the profession is being held in esteem in this our country. Teachers surely are not respected in this country considering how our employers treat us with disdain.

    We reject the idea of any insurance that seeks to further degrade our profession. If the government really means well for us, he should have sticked to the original plan rather than deducting ¢10 from our meagre salary.

    The so called insurance according to our employers is meant to:

    (1) Cover GH₵18,000.00 for natural and accidental deaths.

    (2) Cover of up to GH₵18,000 for permanent disability arising out of an accident or a serious illness.

    (3) Cover of GH₵9,000 paid upon the diagnosis of a critical illness such as Cancer, Stokes, Kidney Failure, Heart Attacks, Paralysis and Deafness.

    We now ask the million dollar question: what has happened to teachers’ conditions of service?

    We are surprised at the turn of events as the government is trying to use subtle way to sweep teachers’ conditions of service under carpet and pretend to seeking our welfare through this lame policy with another agenda of milking desperate teachers.
    Can’t the government institute a fund on our behalf to cover for these non common events that hardly occur in the lifetime of teachers.

    If we think some so called Mother Union will come to our aid then probably we are not teachers.
    We either rise up to demand for proper treatment or never. Teachers will continue to grope in darkness if we don’t rise. A group of intellectual dweebs are manipulating us to their whims and caprices.

    The All Teachers Alliance Ghana (ATAG) is ready to fight the course of freedom and justice for teachers and we want all teachers to throw their support for us to achieve this.

    Powered by the All Teachers Alliance Ghana (ATAG)
    atag.gh@gmail.com

    …Signed…
    Isaac Ofori
    National Chairman
    0249403277

    Albert Dadson Amoah
    General Secretary
    0241871847

    Abraham.k. Arhin
    Communication Director
    0249653192[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

  • PRESS CONFERENCE ON TEACHERS’ CONDITIONS OF SERVICE; UNPAID SALARY ARREARS AND INSURANCE POLICY ON 2ND JULY, 2018 AT PREMPEH COLLEGE, KUMASI BY THE ALL TEACHERS ALLIANCE GHANA (ATAG)

    [vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Good morning ladies and gentlemen of the media, you are welcome to today’s press conference. We have called you this morning to register our displeasure on the way and manner many important issues of teachers are being handled in this country. It is our expectation that you would record the issues accurately and disseminate same for all stakeholders in the education landscape.

    We want to bring to the attention of the media that teachers across the country had not treated well by successive governments and the current administration is deliberately perpetuating same.

    Today, we want the whole world to understand that the scale has fallen from our eyes and we will not kowtow to any form of threat and coddles until the government head to our plea. We believe the marginal treatment of teachers in this our country is becoming too much and it is time we bear our teeth to the government.

    Many things are not done right in this country when it comes to issues affecting teachers. We are treated with a lot of unfairness, disdain and disrespect. We appreciate what the government intend to do for us to promote quality education but we believe that the potholes of deficiencies are many and need to be covered for any good intensions to be carried out.

    There are issues that clearly depict the betrayal of trust by government and continue to deepen the apathy and lack of commitment of teachers. The fallen standard of education is partly attributed to some of these issues but the government and our employers had deliberately turned blind eyes and death ears to them.

    The issues are outlined as follow:

    (1) The whooping accumulation of arrears is stunning and mind boggling. Many of us are full of grievances because legitimately we have been denied what is due us after working for months and years without salaries. This treatment is sheer wickedness against the profession. There are many of us, across the country that are affected by these unprecedented arrears issue. From 2012 up till 2016, many teachers who were employed legitimately by the government through the Ghana Education Service were only paid three months’ salary arrears and the rest left outstanding. Though some payments had been made since 2015, it is yet to cover every victim. For instance, the 2016 batch of teachers, numbering over 16,000 is yet to receive their arrears.

    We are telling the government that the negotiations are enough and do not merit fairness as well, he should check the data in place and quickly pay all outstanding arrears even if he has to borrow to do so.

    It becomes demeaning and insults if we are made to feel that before arrears could be paid you need to be validated. Even after validation, many of us are yet to receive our arrears. This is total cheating and unfair labour practice. It is only in Ghana that this kind of treatment could be entertained.

    On Thursday, 5th July, teachers across the country will converge in Accra to demonstrate against the government for owning them monies they have legitimately worked for. We call on all well-meaning teachers who feel betrayed to join in the march for freedom and justice.

    (2) Our Bargaining Agreement, that spells out our conditions of service, with the government since December 2012 had expired and hanging in the balance. This is not good since it leaves the profession naked and impoverished. Though there has been some salary adjustments since the inception of the single spine pay policy, teachers’ conditions of service under current economic turbulence is nothing good to write home about. Comparatively, it is only in teaching profession that lacks proper conditions of service. We do not have any meaningful career development but only upgrading of certificates to enable us get promoted. After working for seven years with all the classroom work and activities, an interview with mere asking of questions will determine your fate. The saddest aspect of it is that these promotions do not fetch any additional meaningful income: just a step or two ahead of our previous rank.

    We want to demand on behalf of teachers what has happened to our conditions of service which border on salaries, fringe benefits and allowances, principles of engagement and termination of service such as transfers, promotion and housing, sick leave with pay, training and retraining, medical schemes, study leave, release of employee and why it cannot be renewed.

    The single spine salary structure did not favour teachers because our retention premium is poor as compared to other professions and we have been deliberately been left out of the category 2 and 3 allowances captured under the structure.

    We are asking GNAT, who holds the bargaining power, as a matter of urgency convene a meeting calling all the unions to champion a common front and invite government to the negotiation table on our conditions of service as professionals before things get out of hands. We believe GNAT has all the muscles to do this and must not disappoint us.

    (3) On the early hours of Tuesday, 26th June, 2018, teachers woke up in the morning only to be greeted with some GH₵10 SIC insurance policy deduction on our payslip. We understand the policy is the main idea of the government to better the condition of teachers. We are wondering why teachers were not briefed on the policy before enrollment. We believe this kind of posture depict how teachers have been disrespected in this country. An insurance policy which comes in the name of ‘GES’ stands questionable: an indication to drain innocent teachers of their meagre income.

    In any case, many teachers across the country have subscribed to different insurance policy and we think it is enough. The suspension of the policy and asking teachers to opt out or in if they want is neither here or there. It should be taken out completely. Though the idea is good, we want the insurance policy to be in cooperated in our conditions of service for us to benefit without any form of deduction.

    The quality of education is a correlation between teacher welfare development and children good performance. If the government’s focus is on the quality of children that receive education in this country, then he must understand that teachers deserve better going forward.

    Education in Ghana revolves around teachers and if care is not taking, the current trend of fallen standard will continue to sink further. We do not abhor licensing of teachers or operationalizing the profession to promote sanity and quality but we think leaving teachers desperate in this regard will create more room for knee-jerk performance of various positive educational policies.

    All Teachers Alliance Ghana (ATAG) is calling on the government in all sincerity, not for the course of achieving political capital or giving arsenals to his opponents, but to give the teaching profession a facelift by focusing on raising the standard of living of teachers through additional reforms that will better our conditions of service.

    The time is now. If the government refuses to attend to these issues and do something tangible about them, we will advise ourselves as teachers going forward.

    We will stage a historical uprising in the teaching profession, by inviting teachers to rise up to stand for their rights and freedom, to seek for proper dignity to be accorded us instead of paying us lip service and flattery.

    Long live ATAG!

    Long live Teachers Unions!

    Long live Ghana!.

    Thank you.

     

    Isaac Ofori

    National Chairman

    0249403277

    Albert Dadson Amoah

    General secretary

    0241871847

    Elvis Adu Agyeman

    Ashanti Regional Chairman

    0554376175[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]