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Forty-seven workers at public-listed company Global Yellow Pages received a Christmas gift late last year - when they finally obtained salary increases and bonus payments for which they had been fighting for many months.
The Singapore Manual and Mercantile Workers' Union (SMMWU), which represented the workers, took the unusual step of going to the Industrial Arbitration Court (IAC), which handles labour disputes, to claim the wage increases and bonuses.
A court hearing was set for Dec9 last year.
Before the hearing took place, however, the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) decided to intervene.
Following a meeting between the three parties on Dec 16, Global Yellow Pages, which publishes directories, relented and agreed to pay the workers two months' bonus, and a monthly pay increase of 5per cent, backdated to July11 last year.
Confirming the settlement, an MOM spokesman said: 'Both the union and company reached an amicable settlement after a conciliation meeting on Dec 16 at the ministry.'
CEO Mr Stanley Tan of Global Yellow Pages has since written to SMMWU secretary-general John De Payva to say that arriving at the agreement to avoid the IAC process 'is in the best interest of all concerned'.
The settlement brought relief to the workers.
Former Housing Minister Mah Bow Tan is Chairman of the company.
The Singapore Manual and Mercantile Workers' Union (SMMWU), which represented the workers, took the unusual step of going to the Industrial Arbitration Court (IAC), which handles labour disputes, to claim the wage increases and bonuses.
A court hearing was set for Dec9 last year.
Before the hearing took place, however, the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) decided to intervene.
Following a meeting between the three parties on Dec 16, Global Yellow Pages, which publishes directories, relented and agreed to pay the workers two months' bonus, and a monthly pay increase of 5per cent, backdated to July11 last year.
Confirming the settlement, an MOM spokesman said: 'Both the union and company reached an amicable settlement after a conciliation meeting on Dec 16 at the ministry.'
CEO Mr Stanley Tan of Global Yellow Pages has since written to SMMWU secretary-general John De Payva to say that arriving at the agreement to avoid the IAC process 'is in the best interest of all concerned'.
The settlement brought relief to the workers.
Former Housing Minister Mah Bow Tan is Chairman of the company.
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