The Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU) has applauded the decision of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) under the leadership of President Bola Tinubu to exempt public tertiary institutions from the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS).
The union said this was one of the best decisions taken so far by the president since he assumed office.
In a statement by COEASU president, Smart Olugbeko, the union said by this development, the College of Education (COE) system in particular, and the tertiary education sector in general, have been delivered from the backward bureaucratic bottlenecks, encumbrances, and corrupt practices associated with the centralized pay system.
The statement reads: “We commend President Tinubu for hearkening to the voice of reason and taking decisive action. This action has further shown that Mr President is not just a listening leader with a great passion for fairness and smooth-running of the Nigerian education sector, he is also in charge of his administration.
“We equally commend the Honourable Minister of Education, Professor Tahir Mamman, who brought the attention of President Tinubu to the obnoxious IPPIS and its damaging effects on the education sector.
“Our exemption from IPPIS has restored normal procedure for staff recruitment as it will stop the donation of staff by some opaque stakeholders. Now, the Governing Councils and Provosts will be able to perform their constitutional roles as the managers of their respective institutions; they will be able to effectively exercise their statutory control over staff recruitment, promotion, and discipline and payroll administration.”
He further emphasised that the action has also ended the frustrations imposed by intractable errors of IPPIS against individual staff, such as short-payment, regular pay omission, withholding, and/or delay in remittance of third-party deductions, to mention just a few.
He stated: “Our Union has consistently put up a strong opposition against IPPIS as a fraudulent and ineffective platform. Sadly, such a platform with its obvious lapses was allowed to wreak havoc on the education system for such a long time. It will take a long time before our institutions can be completely healed of the injuries caused by IPPIS.”
Olugbeko also explained that more than seventy lecturers who embarked on sabbatical leave between 2020 and 2022 were not paid salaries throughout the sabbatical leave while some were paid for a few months.
He added: “Also, many lecturers are still being owed salaries and IPPIS could not explain the reasons for the omission. All efforts to make IPPIS effect payment to these lecturers yielded no result.
“However, by the history of our long-drawn struggle against the problematic pay platform, we are sure that certain persons in critical ministries whose parochial interests have been wounded by the President’s action will play sabotage by putting up measures to ensure that our institutions have a problem accessing their funds, leading to shortfalls and inability to pay salaries promptly to seek selfish vindication for IPPIS.”










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