NEDLAC definition
Examples of NEDLAC in a sentence
The Parties will also encourage contacts between other similar and relevant institutions in South Africa and the European Union such as the Economic and Social Committee of the European Community and the National Economic Development and Labour Council (NEDLAC) of South Africa.
Consideration of the usefulness of dedicated ports of entry in specific industries will be prioritised in the further work to be undertaken in the NEDLAC Task Team after the Jobs Summit, with a possible pilot project in one industry being introduced to determine its usefulness.
This Jobs Summit commitment carries with it the recognition, by all NEDLAC constituencies, that we can only address the weaknesses in our economy if all the economic stakeholders become far more innovative.
Finally, it should be noted that Government demonstrated overwhelming goodwill in the NEDLAC process and made a number of concessions that COSATU noted in its submission, of which NEHAWU is an affiliate.
Furthermore a number of bilateral meetings were held with ILO constituents, particularly organized labour, after the project was discussed in the National Economic Development and Labour Council (NEDLAC).
Together with the above Ministerial Determination a “Code of good practice for Special Public Works Programmes” was agreed to at NEDLAC in 2002.
COSATU‟s concern of the BMA potentially fragmenting the State and the power of Labour in collective bargaining was addressed through the following clauses welcomed by COSATU in the NEDLAC process: (a) the provision that border law enforcement functions will be an exclusive BMA function and (b) the insertion of the PSCBC clause.
Prohibition on outsourcing be extended to all function of the Government made a number of compromises during the NEDLAC process to address the concerns of labour.
The final NEDLAC report on the ▇▇▇▇ only recorded three areas of Agency Creation In the Socio-economic Impact Assessment Study (SEIAS) commissioned by DHA on the draft ▇▇▇▇, the establishment of a Border Management Agency was determined to be a substantially less cost effective option than capacitating the SANDF to perform the function (R15 – 24 billion as compared to projections of R2.5 billion for the SANDF to perform the function).
Currently negotiations at NEDLAC are continuing to finalise amendments to the code based on EPWP experiences in the first phase.