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IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again - Education - Nairaland

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IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by AsomArchitectNG(m): 6:45am On Nov 04, 2019
As the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) yet again assails the nation with threats of industrial action, it must realise that its antics are becoming increasingly counter-productive and irrelevant.

The cause of ASUU’s latest grouse is the Federal Government’s directive that all employees in its establishments be enrolled in the Integrated Personnel Payment Information System (IPPIS) before the end of October 2019. The union has rejected inclusion in IPPIS since February 2014, arguing that the councils of federal universities were the direct employers of academic staff rather than the Federal Government, and that the system did not account for the peculiarities of universities. It also claimed that flaws had been detected when IPPIS was implemented in the healthcare sector.

Following the government’s threat that any employee who did not enroll on IPPIS by the October deadline would not be paid their salaries, ASUU has restated its strike warning. The union has directed its members not to fill the personnel verification forms which require the inclusion of IPPIS numbers and has taken its case to the Senate.

For a union exclusively comprised of academics, it is surprising that ASUU would actually dare to make patently pedestrian arguments the basis of its anti-IPPIS stance.

It is disingenuous of the union to claim that university councils are the direct employers of academics when it is common knowledge that all staff in federal universities are paid by the Federal Government. That is the reason why ASUU negotiates with government officials rather than university councils during its many disputes over salaries and conditions of service.

It is also the reason why the union has never pushed its vaunted claims to university autonomy to their logical conclusion by demanding that the Federal Government stop funding federal universities. Clearly, ASUU does not wish to pay the piper while reserving the right to dictate the tune.

Related to this is the ludicrous assertion that IPPIS cannot cater to the peculiar circumstances of university work, especially the consultancies, adjunct lectureships, sabbatical leave and external assessment that are a regular feature of academic life. Not only does this contradict the initial position that IPPIS undermines university autonomy, it arrogantly implies that federal universities are somehow more complicated to run than the ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) that are already on IPPIS, including the armed forces and research institutes.

ASUU’s claims that IPPIS lacks constitutional backing and is unsupported by any act of the National Assembly are similarly groundless. IPPIS is a policy enunciated by the Federal Government through its Ministry of Finance which is constitutionally empowered to formulate and implement such programmes because they fall within the remit of its legally-defined responsibilities. ASUU’s check-off dues do not have constitutional backing, either; that has not stopped the union from avidly collecting them.

In behaving with such petulance, ASUU is displaying itself at its very worst, showing itself to be obtuse, selfish, and stubbornly determined to get its own way, regardless of the cost to the rest of society. This is the same union which similarly claimed that the Treasury Single Account (TSA) policy could not work in universities, and advanced almost the same arguments of autonomy and peculiarity that it is pushing now.

While the implementation of IPPIS has not been perfect, its advantages cannot be doubted. In June, the Accountant-General of the Federation, Mr. Ahmed Idris, claimed that N273.8 billion had been saved in 2017 and 2018 as a result of IPPIS. At least 561 MDAs are on the system, with a total staff count of 755,422. Combined with TSA, the system has helped government to get a grip on the vexed issues of transparency and probity in payroll management.

The desperation with which ASUU is fighting against the implementation of IPPIS in federal universities has led to speculations that it is doing so because enrolling in the system would expose those academics who have multiple full-time jobs in several federal establishments. Regardless of the merits of such claims, it is surprising that a union which consistently claims to seek transparency and accountability in national life would be so loth to apply those same principles to itself.

ASUU’s antics are paradoxically turning it into an anti-democratic union – a hypocritical body which cannot hold itself to the standards it consistently advocates for others. Its usually loud voice was uncharacteristically muted when the BBC’s “Sex for Grades” documentary was broadcast last month. It has rarely spoken out against the many other abuses perpetrated by its members, especially plagiarism, the sale of handouts, age manipulation and certificate forgery. Its continual emphasis on salaries and benefits have conspired to create a public image for itself as a greedy cash-and-carry group, and its latest fulminations against IPPIS only serve to entrench this unflattering perception.

If ASUU truly wishes to live up to its own noble ideals, it must work with the Federal Government to implement a policy that can only enhance the transparency, accountability and integrity it so strenuously professes to be fighting for.

Source: https://thenationonlineng.net/there-goes-ASUU-again/

25 Likes 8 Shares

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by Olaps: 6:46am On Nov 04, 2019
Hmmm

1 Like

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by MANNABBQGRILLS: 7:00am On Nov 04, 2019
Following.....

4 Likes 2 Shares

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by Freemanbobble: 7:00am On Nov 04, 2019
Too many rubbish going on in the bursary department of every tertiary institutions. Staff are being short paid
The money that comes with step and level and promotions being ommitted and most staff won't know on time

All federal parastatals, agencies, department and ministries must enter this IppIs
If centralising will tackle corruption then lets do it


Treasury single account was successful

Integrated payroll system should also succeed

Nothing ASUU can do about it

All federal staff must migrate to it
University of Benin joined the payroll system this month

Nigeria must be great
Even if it will take time. Even if the speed is going to be that of injured snail or sloth
We will be great
Rome wasn't built in a day

66 Likes 10 Shares

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by LOGOBELT: 7:01am On Nov 04, 2019
This ASUU don tire me self


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2 Likes

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by LordAzubuike(f): 7:01am On Nov 04, 2019
Most lecturers teach in more than 1 university and that's the major reason they are scared of ippis. Over the years ASUU has been known to fight for selfish reasons and not the benefit of Nigerian students.

54 Likes 5 Shares

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by greatmarshall(m): 7:02am On Nov 04, 2019
Oya na
Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by Nobody: 7:02am On Nov 04, 2019
Sic
post=83722881:
Following.....
Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by LadySarah: 7:02am On Nov 04, 2019
If i rem Dr Dike who would never b seen in School till one week pre exam and then compress a sem lecture in one day,i'd support IPPIS.
If i rem Dr Am who lectured in 3 universities at that time,robbing us of valusble lecture time.i'd accept.
A project supervisor never seen becsuse he is on sabbatical leave without a replacement.

Or was Dr Anya who surfaced on vals day to Teach a topic Eng 301 that would.have 40percent Mark only.

I also know that it is the grass that suffers when two elephants fight.so i'd say Sort it out.Nigerian Students have suffered enough!

37 Likes 2 Shares

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by gokecont(m): 7:02am On Nov 04, 2019
Assuuuuuu again!!!!


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1 Like

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by Salvador1: 7:03am On Nov 04, 2019
Thank God I'm now a graduate.

To hell with ASUU and their wahala.

9 Likes

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by Nobody: 7:04am On Nov 04, 2019
Ah!!!! ASUU again?

2 Likes

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by netpro(m): 7:04am On Nov 04, 2019
IPPIS will expose the corruption in ASUU, ghost workers, lecturers earning multiple salaries from different Universities and more.

19 Likes 1 Share

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by Princerichi0(m): 7:04am On Nov 04, 2019
ASUU, you guys can go on strike now. I'm a graduate grin grin

1 Like

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by ednut1(m): 7:05am On Nov 04, 2019
We need a leader like Gaddafi. Its better for 10 people to be chopping than 10 million choppers

5 Likes

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by hisgrace090: 7:06am On Nov 04, 2019
ASUU power must bow for this.


We can't allow one person holding 2,3 to 4 jobs to continue while the unemployed roamed the street of Nigeria daily.

25 Likes 1 Share

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by gboyetade: 7:07am On Nov 04, 2019
ASUU is not being straight forward

6 Likes

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by SEGLIZ: 7:07am On Nov 04, 2019
........ ...... ......... "The union has rejected inclusion in IPPIS since February 2014, arguing that the councils of federal universities were the direct employers of academic staff rather than the Federal Government, and that the system did not account for the peculiarities of universities."
very dumb and lame excuse for the so called learned and intelligent fellows. they have never come out to fight against the archaic scheme and course outline they've being using.
I can't just imagine, who owns the council of federal universities? is the same not an agency of the federal government established and empowered to monitor and regulate their activities?
the lecturers are a disgrace to their families, academic community and the nation at large, with this line of argument. if we keep having this empty skull teaching in our citadel of learning then we should expect more half baked or unbaked graduate being turned out into the system daily.

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by Emereolevanwill(m): 7:08am On Nov 04, 2019
Universities in Nigeria are just not good, personally I think it would make more sense if ASUU will swallow it's pride albeit hiding it greedy-selfishness and que into IPPIS.
It will be for a better Nigeria, a Nigeria with accountability and transperancy.

7 Likes

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by Hez143(m): 7:08am On Nov 04, 2019
they knew their devlish act,that why they don't wanna comply. So much for truth and service

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by felony101(m): 7:09am On Nov 04, 2019
Well said.....

1 Like

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by Awesome6s: 7:09am On Nov 04, 2019
Make ASUU reply before we draw any conclusion, this seems like an article written to bad mouth them

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by tiyyonas(m): 7:10am On Nov 04, 2019
Is high time they join this payment platform.

5 Likes

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by xtocom: 7:11am On Nov 04, 2019
when thunder grumbles too much, it will be taking for granted . anyway, who read it to the end?

3 Likes

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by FlyboyZee: 7:11am On Nov 04, 2019
AsomArchitectNG:
As the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) yet again assails the nation with threats of industrial action, it must realise that its antics are becoming increasingly counter-productive and irrelevant.

The cause of ASUU’s latest grouse is the Federal Government’s directive that all employees in its establishments be enrolled in the Integrated Personnel Payment Information System (IPPIS) before the end of October 2019. The union has rejected inclusion in IPPIS since February 2014, arguing that the councils of federal universities were the direct employers of academic staff rather than the Federal Government, and that the system did not account for the peculiarities of universities. It also claimed that flaws had been detected when IPPIS was implemented in the healthcare sector.

Following the government’s threat that any employee who did not enroll on IPPIS by the October deadline would not be paid their salaries, ASUU has restated its strike warning. The union has directed its members not to fill the personnel verification forms which require the inclusion of IPPIS numbers and has taken its case to the Senate.

For a union exclusively comprised of academics, it is surprising that ASUU would actually dare to make patently pedestrian arguments the basis of its anti-IPPIS stance.

It is disingenuous of the union to claim that university councils are the direct employers of academics when it is common knowledge that all staff in federal universities are paid by the Federal Government. That is the reason why ASUU negotiates with government officials rather than university councils during its many disputes over salaries and conditions of service.

It is also the reason why the union has never pushed its vaunted claims to university autonomy to their logical conclusion by demanding that the Federal Government stop funding federal universities. Clearly, ASUU does not wish to pay the piper while reserving the right to dictate the tune.

Related to this is the ludicrous assertion that IPPIS cannot cater to the peculiar circumstances of university work, especially the consultancies, adjunct lectureships, sabbatical leave and external assessment that are a regular feature of academic life. Not only does this contradict the initial position that IPPIS undermines university autonomy, it arrogantly implies that federal universities are somehow more complicated to run than the ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) that are already on IPPIS, including the armed forces and research institutes.

ASUU’s claims that IPPIS lacks constitutional backing and is unsupported by any act of the National Assembly are similarly groundless. IPPIS is a policy enunciated by the Federal Government through its Ministry of Finance which is constitutionally empowered to formulate and implement such programmes because they fall within the remit of its legally-defined responsibilities. ASUU’s check-off dues do not have constitutional backing, either; that has not stopped the union from avidly collecting them.

In behaving with such petulance, ASUU is displaying itself at its very worst, showing itself to be obtuse, selfish, and stubbornly determined to get its own way, regardless of the cost to the rest of society. This is the same union which similarly claimed that the Treasury Single Account (TSA) policy could not work in universities, and advanced almost the same arguments of autonomy and peculiarity that it is pushing now.

While the implementation of IPPIS has not been perfect, its advantages cannot be doubted. In June, the Accountant-General of the Federation, Mr. Ahmed Idris, claimed that N273.8 billion had been saved in 2017 and 2018 as a result of IPPIS. At least 561 MDAs are on the system, with a total staff count of 755,422. Combined with TSA, the system has helped government to get a grip on the vexed issues of transparency and probity in payroll management.

The desperation with which ASUU is fighting against the implementation of IPPIS in federal universities has led to speculations that it is doing so because enrolling in the system would expose those academics who have multiple full-time jobs in several federal establishments. Regardless of the merits of such claims, it is surprising that a union which consistently claims to seek transparency and accountability in national life would be so loth to apply those same principles to itself.

ASUU’s antics are paradoxically turning it into an anti-democratic union – a hypocritical body which cannot hold itself to the standards it consistently advocates for others. Its usually loud voice was uncharacteristically muted when the BBC’s “Sex for Grades” documentary was broadcast last month. It has rarely spoken out against the many other abuses perpetrated by its members, especially plagiarism, the sale of handouts, age manipulation and certificate forgery. Its continual emphasis on salaries and benefits have conspired to create a public image for itself as a greedy cash-and-carry group, and its latest fulminations against IPPIS only serve to entrench this unflattering perception.

If ASUU truly wishes to live up to its own noble ideals, it must work with the Federal Government to implement a policy that can only enhance the transparency, accountability and integrity it so strenuously professes to be fighting for.

Source: https://thenationonlineng.net/there-goes-ASUU-again/

Rubbish!

FGN should go ahead with its treat, and let ASUU too do theirs. Why is the FG denigrating ASUU, calling them names, maligning the Union, but refusing to do the commonest things. What a shame!

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by tipsclearss: 7:11am On Nov 04, 2019
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Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by Enemyofpeace: 7:11am On Nov 04, 2019
post=83722881:
Following.....
as usual na follow follow you be nau

1 Like

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by Offpoint: 7:12am On Nov 04, 2019
Strength of every working nation: Education, Technology, Agriculture and her leaders... unfortunately Nigeria lack all it.

Las Las this country will be Auction to the highest bidder.

3 Likes

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by aod1(m): 7:14am On Nov 04, 2019
Salvador1:
Thank God I'm now a graduate.

To hell with ASUU and there wahala.
hmmm, and you cannot differentiate between "their" and "there"

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: IPPIS And ASUU: There Goes ASUU Again by yaki84: 7:16am On Nov 04, 2019
AsomArchitectNG:
As the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) yet again assails the nation with threats of industrial action, it must realise that its antics are becoming increasingly counter-productive and irrelevant.

The cause of ASUU’s latest grouse is the Federal Government’s directive that all employees in its establishments be enrolled in the Integrated Personnel Payment Information System (IPPIS) before the end of October 2019. The union has rejected inclusion in IPPIS since February 2014, arguing that the councils of federal universities were the direct employers of academic staff rather than the Federal Government, and that the system did not account for the peculiarities of universities. It also claimed that flaws had been detected when IPPIS was implemented in the healthcare sector.

Following the government’s threat that any employee who did not enroll on IPPIS by the October deadline would not be paid their salaries, ASUU has restated its strike warning. The union has directed its members not to fill the personnel verification forms which require the inclusion of IPPIS numbers and has taken its case to the Senate.

For a union exclusively comprised of academics, it is surprising that ASUU would actually dare to make patently pedestrian arguments the basis of its anti-IPPIS stance.

It is disingenuous of the union to claim that university councils are the direct employers of academics when it is common knowledge that all staff in federal universities are paid by the Federal Government. That is the reason why ASUU negotiates with government officials rather than university councils during its many disputes over salaries and conditions of service.

It is also the reason why the union has never pushed its vaunted claims to university autonomy to their logical conclusion by demanding that the Federal Government stop funding federal universities. Clearly, ASUU does not wish to pay the piper while reserving the right to dictate the tune.

Related to this is the ludicrous assertion that IPPIS cannot cater to the peculiar circumstances of university work, especially the consultancies, adjunct lectureships, sabbatical leave and external assessment that are a regular feature of academic life. Not only does this contradict the initial position that IPPIS undermines university autonomy, it arrogantly implies that federal universities are somehow more complicated to run than the ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) that are already on IPPIS, including the armed forces and research institutes.

ASUU’s claims that IPPIS lacks constitutional backing and is unsupported by any act of the National Assembly are similarly groundless. IPPIS is a policy enunciated by the Federal Government through its Ministry of Finance which is constitutionally empowered to formulate and implement such programmes because they fall within the remit of its legally-defined responsibilities. ASUU’s check-off dues do not have constitutional backing, either; that has not stopped the union from avidly collecting them.

In behaving with such petulance, ASUU is displaying itself at its very worst, showing itself to be obtuse, selfish, and stubbornly determined to get its own way, regardless of the cost to the rest of society. This is the same union which similarly claimed that the Treasury Single Account (TSA) policy could not work in universities, and advanced almost the same arguments of autonomy and peculiarity that it is pushing now.

While the implementation of IPPIS has not been perfect, its advantages cannot be doubted. In June, the Accountant-General of the Federation, Mr. Ahmed Idris, claimed that N273.8 billion had been saved in 2017 and 2018 as a result of IPPIS. At least 561 MDAs are on the system, with a total staff count of 755,422. Combined with TSA, the system has helped government to get a grip on the vexed issues of transparency and probity in payroll management.

The desperation with which ASUU is fighting against the implementation of IPPIS in federal universities has led to speculations that it is doing so because enrolling in the system would expose those academics who have multiple full-time jobs in several federal establishments. Regardless of the merits of such claims, it is surprising that a union which consistently claims to seek transparency and accountability in national life would be so loth to apply those same principles to itself.

ASUU’s antics are paradoxically turning it into an anti-democratic union – a hypocritical body which cannot hold itself to the standards it consistently advocates for others. Its usually loud voice was uncharacteristically muted when the BBC’s “Sex for Grades” documentary was broadcast last month. It has rarely spoken out against the many other abuses perpetrated by its members, especially plagiarism, the sale of handouts, age manipulation and certificate forgery. Its continual emphasis on salaries and benefits have conspired to create a public image for itself as a greedy cash-and-carry group, and its latest fulminations against IPPIS only serve to entrench this unflattering perception.

If ASUU truly wishes to live up to its own noble ideals, it must work with the Federal Government to implement a policy that can only enhance the transparency, accountability and integrity it so strenuously professes to be fighting for.

Source: https://thenationonlineng.net/there-goes-ASUU-again/
I still remember when gej wanted implementing this ippis then on all unis n assu went on strike, apc supoorted their action. What a pathetic hypocritical party.
Watch as zombies will be lauding this feat

8 Likes 1 Share

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Hilarious PICTURE Of THOSE days in Primary School / Strike: FG Mulls Proscription Of ASUU / Protest In UNILORIN Over Unacceptable Result

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