Showing posts with label Allowance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allowance. Show all posts

13 July 2009

Kerajaan pertimbang beri elaun khas komando

Utusan Online

MERSING 13 Julai - Kementerian Pertahanan mempertimbangkan untuk memberikan elaun khas kepada anggota komando sebagai menghargai kebolehan unit tersebut sekaligus mempertingkatkan kesiapsiagaan Angkatan Tentera Malaysia (ATM).

Menteri Pertahanan, Datuk Seri Dr. Ahmad Zahid Hamidi berkata, cadangan itu yang menumpukan kebajikan para anggota komando akan dibawa ke kabinet bagi mendapatkan maklum balas.

“Saya menghargai kemahiran pasukan elit ini yang merangkumi Pasukan Khas Laut (Paskal), Pasukan Khas Udara (Paskau) dan Gerak Khas.

“Saya fikir wajar dipertimbangkan pemberian elaun khas supaya ia setimpal dengan ahli profesional lain walaupun kerajaan telah memberikan elaun kepada anggota komando sebelum ini,” katanya kepada pemberita selepas menerima anugerah beret hijau kehormat Rejimen Gerak Khas di Kem Iskandar, di sini, hari ini.

- BERNAMA

13 October 2008

Elaun misi PBB belum dibayar

Berita Harian

DI mana silapnya elaun yang dijanjikan sehingga kami masih belum ada jaminan daripada mana-mana pihak akan dibayar dalam masa terdekat. Apakah wajar masa setahun diambil oleh pihak pengurusan kewangan untuk membayar elaun misi kepada pegawai dan anggotanya untuk misi Pertubuhan Bangsa-Bangsa Bersatu (PBB) di Timor Leste.

Bagi pegawai dan anggota terbabit, keadaan ini sudah tentunya mendatangkan kesusahan dan trauma kerana terpaksa membuat pinjaman untuk menampung perbelanjaan keluarga yang ditinggalkan sepanjang tempoh berkhidmat di luar negara.

Kami merayu kepada pihak pengurusan kewangan Polis Diraja Malaysia (PDRM) dan Angkatan Tentera Malaysia (ATM) untuk mengambil tindakan.

GEMULAH MAJOR ALFERDO,
Dili.

28 April 2008

Better pay for specialists

The Star

KLANG: The Health Ministry is stepping up efforts to get Malaysian specialists overseas to return home by offering them better remuneration.

Health Minister Datuk Liow Tiong Lai said the Ministry would offer these specialists salaries in the top-most higher management tier, Jusa grades A to C, depending on their experience.

“This will enable them to earn more than RM10,000 a month including allowances,” he said.

This was an upgrade from the current U54 senior officer post offer, which offers less than RM10,000, he added.

Only 112 overseas specialists had returned to Malaysia in the last five years, and the ministry hoped more would come home and serve the people, Liow said.

Asked why some Malaysian specialists abroad had complained that they experienced difficulty in returning home to work, he said it likely had to do with negotiations on salary, perks and working conditions.

“We were using all kinds of means to overcome the shortage of doctors – increasing intake, hiring foreign doctors and increasing incentives. These did not solve the problem.

“Now we are asking the specialists to come home,” he said.

With the country short of 9,000 doctors, he urged general practitioners to return to government hospitals and clinics once or twice a month to contribute their services, just like private specialists are doing.

These doctors would be paid RM80 an hour, he said after launching the Taiwanese graduates’ alumni annual general meeting yesterday.

On a plan to release genetically-modified (GM) “killer” Aedes mosquitoes in the fishing village of Pulau Ketam in Selangor as part of international field trials to fight dengue, he said it would be a breakthrough if it was successful.

However, for now, the ministry would look into environmental and other concerns.

It was reported in an English newspaper yesterday that the GM male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes would be released into the wild to eliminate the Aedes mosquito, which spreads dengue fever.

02 August 2007

Government staff to get RM5 driving allowance

The Star

SEREMBAN: Civil servants required to drive government vehicles to conduct official duties can now claim a RM5 daily allowance.

This will also apply to those required to drive vans, lorries or motorised boats.

Public Services Department director-general Tan Sri Ismail Adam said civil servants required to ride motorcycles for official duties would also be entitled to claim RM3 per day.

“These allowances are for civil servants who are ordered by their superiors to drive a government vehicle, although it is out of their job scope,” he said in a circular.

The directive was made effective June 1.

However, Ismail said that in order for civil servants to be eligible for the allowance, they must drive for at least four hours a day and possess a valid driving licence.

Those required to handle boats should have a competency certificate issued by the Marine Department.


10 May 2007

Hardship allowance ‘to make a difference’

roygoh@nst.com.my
NST

Mohd Zulkarnain Abdul Wahab, from Terengganu, was one of the teachers who helped his rural students achieve 100 per cent pass rate in the SPM exams last year.
Mohd Zulkarnain Abdul Wahab, from Terengganu, was one of the teachers who helped his rural students achieve 100 per cent pass rate in the SPM exams last year.

KOTA KINABALU: If the new hardship allowance for rural teachers comes his way, Yen Vi Leong will get a set of tyres for his faithful four-wheel-drive vehicle.

"It is a good incentive for teachers to strive harder and it will lighten their burden," said this teacher of a primary school in Inanam.

"Whether or not I get it, is secondary, because I know there are others who live in worse conditions."

Yen noted that an officer from the Education Department had assessed the school earlier this year.

"It is deemed a remote school because there is no health clinic here, no public transportation and no sealed road."
Hence, the 4WD, which he inherited from his family in Tenghilan, has been crucial in getting him to and fro SK Poring-Poring, where he teaches.

The school, 20 km from Inanam town, is accessible by an uphill dirt road and only when the weather permits.

The allowance, up to RM1,500 a month, will be paid from this month.

The amount each teacher gets depends on the location of the school and other criteria, such as road accessibility, transportation risk, availability of water, electricity, sanitation and health services.

The Education Ministry is now determining the classifications.

The allowance is one of the steps taken by the government to get more teachers to serve in remote areas.

It is aimed at making life more comfortable for teachers like Mohd Zulkarnain Abdul Wahab and Che Fatimah Che Mamat.

Fresh out of university and with a burning desire to teach, Zulkarnain left Terengganu four years ago, not knowing what to expect.

On reaching here in September 2003 Zulkarnain was informed he was posted to SMK Terusan Sugut in Beluran, a location so remote he had to consult a map — and tucked in the northeastern part of Sabah.

That same morning he endured a five-hour drive to reach the town, 300km from here and two more hours by boat, braving the choppy Sungai Labuk and Sungai Sugut rivermouths which front the Sulu Sea.

"It was 7.30pm when I arrived at the village. It was dark as there was no electricity here and it was the dry season, so I had to bathe in the river," said Zulkarnain, 28, who teaches mathematics.

The rivermouth island depends on rainwater for clean water supply and electricity is supplied through a diesel-powered generator, with supplies on every alternate day.

"I admit those were trying times but after about two months I got over it," he said.

Another challenge came after he married his university sweetheart, Che Fatimah Che Mamat, 27, on June 1, 2005.

Che Fatimah was teaching in Terengganu; it was only a year later that she got a transfer to join her husband in Terusan Sugut, a fishing village occupied by 100 families.

She, too, endured a major obstacle about seven months ago. "I was about to give birth and was given permission to return to my hometown for the delivery.

"That night, when we were supposed to leave, the school boat could not start and we had to hitch a ride on board a fisherman’s boat.

"For two hours, I endured a bumpy ride and only God knows my pain and my fears for the baby."

Luckily, Che Fatimah and Zulkarnain made it safely to Sandakan. They flew back to Kuala Terengganu, in time, for the birth of a healthy baby boy.

Any regret so far? "The only transfer I am willing to accept would be back to Terengganu. Otherwise, we are happy to be here," she said.

The two, with 16 other teachers and their principal, Murukesu Margapandu, were responsible for guiding their Form Five students to achieving 100 per cent passes in the SPM examination last year.

The achievement was also made special when one of the students, Jamri Undang, emerged as the best student in the district here with 9As.

08 May 2007

Promotion, pay rise for school heads

PUTRAJAYA: The 7,000 primary school heads nationwide will stand a chance to be promoted and enjoy a pay rise under a new scheme without needing to leave their current schools.

This move, said Education Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Tun Hussein, would ensure that good school heads remained in their schools and continued to administer and improve them.

“Although this new scheme has only been approved in principle, its implementation is being finalised,” he said after meeting representatives of the 24 bodies representing the teaching profession in his office here yesterday.

Hishammuddin said the exact number that would benefit from the scheme had yet to be established, but it would see many school heads recognised for their contributions and tireless efforts.

The minister also announced a location and hardship allowance, ranging from RM500 to RM1,500 for teachers serving in rural areas and the interior.

“The allowance will be classified under three categories, taking into account the mode of transport, travel risks, water and electricity resources, accommodation, sanitation, telecommunication, health services and other facilities,” he said.

According to the ministry’s statistics, 15,499 teachers and 3,797 support staff will benefit from the new allowance, to be paid from May 1 and expected to cost the Government more than RM187mil annually.

The allowance is an extension of the rural incentive payment, implemented in 1991, which is about 10% of the basic salary.

In a case where both husband and wife are serving in rural areas, only one will receive the new allowance while the other will continue to receive the incentive payment.

Hishammuddin said the ministry would also introduce the balik kampung allowance to rural teachers and support staff from this month.

“This means they will receive allowances once a year to cover travel and accommodation expenses when they return to their hometown,” he said.

Only those who have served more than six months in the rural areas are eligible for this allowance, expected to benefit close to 100,000 teachers and support staff.

Later, Hishammuddin said the ministry wanted a report from the National Union of the Teaching Profession (NUTP) on what was hindering teachers from sitting for the Assessment of Efficiency Level (PTK) test for promotions.

The ministry, he said, would then decide on what action to be taken.

“If we can solve it at the ministry level then we don’t have to refer it to the Public Service Department,” he said after launching the Campaign 4 Rewards 2007 contest at Pizza Hut in Kota Damansara.

He was commenting on a report in Malay daily yesterday which quoted NUTP president Anuar Ibrahim as saying that 70,000 non-graduate teachers who had served at least 20 years did not want to sit for the PTK as they were not confident of passing it.