By Akin Okudero
Caveat emptor is a Latin phrase that translates literally to “let the buyer beware.”
In everyday conversation and contract law, it means that the person buying a product or service is responsible for checking its quality before making the purchase. Under this principle, the seller isn’t legally forced to point out every single flaw—it is up to you, the buyer, to do your homework.
Similarly, workers all over the world inclusive Nigeria fall victims of their inability to discern the appropriate Union to belong.
Concerned about the multiplicity of trade unions and the apparent management issues, the federal government of Nigeria, through her official Gazette No.8 volume 65 of 8th February, and 1978, restructured well over 800 unions to 71.
Separating the unions and associations along their jurisdictional scope, the Trade Unions Act CAP T.14 of 2004 and 2005 as amended defined the categories of workers the unions could organise.
Of great concern is the future of the workers when they are lured by wrong unions?
To illustrate pointedly, we bring you a scenario where workers who are employed in statutory corporations, government-owned companies, parastatals, boards and agencies are either deceived or with management fiat were made to belong to associations with jurisdictions to unionise workers in the state and federal core ministries.
THE CONSEQUENCES
When workers in statutory corporations or government-owned companies (often called parastatals) are unionized by a civil service association—which is legally meant only for core ministries—they face serious, systemic risks.
In many jurisdictions, this setup is considered a fundamental mismatch. Civil service associations operate under entirely different legal frameworks, funding mechanisms, and salary scales than government-owned commercial entities.
The significant risks these workers face regarding their careers and benefits can be broken down as follows:
- Benefits and Compensation Risks
Government-owned corporations usually generate their own revenue and can afford higher salary scales, commercial bonuses, and unique allowances.
Ministries rely strictly on rigid government budget allocations.
Loss of Higher Commercial Salary Scales: If a ministry-based union negotiates your contracts, they will likely benchmark your compensation against standard civil service scales (Grade Levels 01–17). This can severely deflate your earning potential compared to what a commercial corporate union would negotiate.
Pension and Gratuity Discrepancies: Statutory corporations frequently offer private, funded contributory pensions or distinct gratuity schemes.
Ministry unions are tied to the core public service pension structures. If wrongly unionized, your distinct retirement formulas could be mismanaged, delayed, or outright unaligned with corporate policy.
Unenforceable Collective Bargaining Agreements (CBAs): If your employer realizes the union has no legal jurisdiction over your sector, they can legally discard any agreement signed by that union. You could lose hard-fought allowances (housing, medical, hazard pay) overnight because the contract itself was legally invalid.
2. Career and Professional Risks
Statutory corporations are meant to operate with corporate agility, whereas ministries prioritize administrative continuity. This creates a massive clash in career growth.
Stagnant Promotion Structures: Parastatals usually promote based on performance, revenue targets, or corporate metrics.
Ministry unions heavily protect seniority-based timelines. Being locked into a ministry mindset can slow down high-performing corporate workers.
Lack of Specialized Professional Advocacy: A ministry union understands administrative clerk roles, not technical corporate roles (e.g., engineers at a state power corporations, specialists at a federal port authority). If you face disciplinary action, a ministry union rep will lack the industry-specific technical knowledge to defend you effectively.
Career Mobility Restrictions: Being lumped into general civil service frameworks can make it harder to transition back into the private sector, as your career milestones look like traditional bureaucracy rather than corporate achievements
3. The Ultimate Legal Risk: Decertification
The single biggest danger is illegal unionization.
If a rival union or the government challenges the arrangement in an industrial or labour court, the court will almost certainly rule that the association has no legal jurisdiction over your corporate workplace.
The Fallout: The union is instantly stripped of its bargaining power at your company. Any ongoing negotiations freeze, past agreements are voided, and workers are left completely unrepresented and unprotected while a new, legal union scrambles to organize from scratch.
HELPING WORKERS IDENTIFY THE RIGHT UNION
This a critical responsibility. Choosing the right union isn’t just about paying dues; it’s about ensuring their specific professional interests, safety, and legal rights are effectively protected by an organization that truly understands their industry.
When advising workers on how to identify the appropriate union to join, you can guide them through a structured evaluation process based on jurisdiction, alignment, and credibility.
1. Verify Legal and Industrial Jurisdiction
The very first step is checking structural compatibility.
A union must have the legal mandate to represent the worker’s specific line of work.
Trade and Sector Alignment: Advise workers to look at the official jurisdictional scope of the union. For instance, a civil servant should look toward public service unions, while a factory worker belongs in a manufacturing or industrial union. Joining a union outside one’s sector can lead to representation gaps during trade disputes.
Check the Recognition Agreement: In many workplaces, the employer already has a signed Recognition Agreement with one or more specific unions. If a “dominant union” is already recognized for their specific cadre, joining that union usually grants the worker immediate bargaining power.
2. Evaluate the Union’s Track Record and Structure
A good union should be transparent, democratic, and actively engaged in worker welfare. Workers should look into:
Collective Bargaining Agreements (CBAs): What has the union actually secured for its members?
Advise workers to look at past and current CBAs negotiated by the union regarding wage increments, health benefits, and working conditions.
Internal Democracy: Does the union hold regular, transparent elections?
Can rank-and-file members voice their opinions, or is decision-making entirely top-down?
Financial Accountability: Workers should feel comfortable asking how their dues (check-off system) are utilized. Trustworthy unions provide regular financial briefings to their members.
3. Assess Essential Member Services
Representation goes beyond collective bargaining; it is also about individual protection when things go wrong. Advise workers to check if the union provides:
Service Area
What Workers Should Look For:
Legal Representation. Does the union have a robust legal team to defend members in cases of wrongful termination, disciplinary hearings, or industrial court cases?
Grievance Handling Is there a clear, active network of local shop stewards (union reps) present at the workplace to handle day-to-day disputes?
Training & Education: Does the union offer capacity-building workshops on labour laws, occupational health and safety, and leadership development?
Welfare Schemes Are there supplementary benefits like cooperative societies, medical assistance funds, or retirement advisory services?
Comrade Akin Okudero, Fellow NIPR and Acting General Secretary Senior Staff Association of Statutory Corporations and Government Owned Companies (SSASCGOC)
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