Thousands of furniture workers closer to being paid

Payout approved but still plenty of red tape

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Photo of a man
Pensioner Ambrose Bezuidenhout has been leading the fight to get the Furniture Industry Provident Fund of the Western Cape to pay out a surplus to its members. Photo: Peter Luhanga

Thousands of former workers in the Western Cape furniture industry are an inch closer to getting paid their long awaited money from the industry’s provident fund, through the Western Cape Surplus Apportionment Scheme.

Although employees were originally paid out, there was a surplus in the fund. After a protracted procedural process, the Financial Services Board approved the fund’s surplus payment scheme on 16 February.

According to the principal secretary of the Furniture Industry Provident Fund of the Western Cape, Terry Miles, there are 27,000 former members of the industry but it’s not clear how many of them are eligible for the approved funds payout.

Miles said the fund is in the region of R60 million.

Atlantis resident Ambrose Bezuidenhout, 63, worked for Atlantis’s Unita Planned Furniture for ten years. He was laid off in 1998 before the company shut down in 2000.

Bezuidenhout said he was leading approximately 300 former furniture employees from Atlantis, Mamre, Pella and Darling in the fight for their money from the SAS.

He said the former members in Atlantis were frustrated and angry as no date had been communicated to them as to when they would eventually be paid.

He said most of the members were very old and poor, relying on state pensions.

He questioned what would happen to the SAS funds accumulating interest in the bank.

Contacted for an update on the fund’s payment date, Miles said the fund had asked actuaries to find out which former fund members qualified for a share of the available surplus and to quantify their shares. Qualifying members would be sent forms to fill in, he said.

Those who did not qualify would be notified.

No date had been set for the payout.

West Cape News for GroundUp 

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