Senate assures speedy passage of new minimum wage bill

The Senate has promised to give the proposed minimum wage bill expeditious passage once it is presented to it by the presidency.
Senator representing Ekiti South and Chairman Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Yemi Adaramodu disclosed this on Friday while speaking with journalists.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu during his national broadcast on the occasion of Democracy Day noted that he would soon forward an Executive Bill that would ultimately, transform into the New Minimum Wage Act to the National Assembly, based on agreement reached with the Organised Labour.
Both the leadership of Nigeria Labour Congress and the Trade Union Congress have however countered President Tinubu as they insisted that there was no agreement on N62,000 as the new Minimum Wage.
Senator Adaramodu who revealed that the Executive Bill would be presented to the National Assembly after the Sallah festive period assured Nigerians that it would be given the necessary attention to assuage the feelings of aggrieved workers.
“Yes, if immediately after Sallah, the Bill is brought by Mr. President to the National Assembly, it’s going to be dealt with, with speed of lightning. Yes, we are going to pass it because it is for the benefit of Nigerian workers.
“Even if it is possible within 30 minutes, we will do that. So it depends on the content of the Bill because the bill will go through the crucibles of the passage of Bills by the Parliament.
”So we are not going to sit down and just say that the Bill has been passed. So we go through the crucibles.
”So within the time, if there are no oppositions from outside, if there are no oppositions from within, there can never be opposition from within because it’s going to be a kind of agreement between Labour, government and organised private sector. So once that one is there and then it comes to us, so definitely we will go through the processes without delay and make sure that Nigerian workers get their deal, ” he said.
Asked if the new minimum wage would be binding on state governors who have expressed strong reservations about their financial capacity, to pay N62,000 as promised by the Federal Government, the Senate spokesperson, noted that negotiations were still ongoing.
He expressed the hope that both the executive at states and federal would ultimately, reach an understanding that would meet the expectations of the Nigerian workers.
“So we don’t even talk about the organised private sector. We don’t even talk about the sub-nationals. And then it behooves the NLC, which recognises the workers in the organized private sector and the sub-nationals to look at the NLC that recognizes them as their members, to even ensure that they advocate for them.
”The issue of some states still paying N18,000, though I don’t know because I don’t suspect that one to be happening. So if there are some states paying that, what have the labour centers in those states done in order to ensure compliance with that N30,000 minimum wage?
“So we need to ask them questions too. But like I said, the National Assembly is going to do this law seriously watertight that either the state or sub-national or organized private sector that is not complying, there is going to be sanction for it. So that’s the way it’s going to be done this time around. But the labour centers too need to protect the welfare of their members, not only with the federal government.”