Submitted by William Skinner
Chris Sinckler, Minister of Finance (l) Fruendel Stuart, Prime Minister 9r)
Chris Sinckler, Minister of Finance (l) Fruendel Stuart, Prime Minister (r)

I am fully aware that the decision to get rid of over 3000 civil servants will be met with great applause by those citizens who for decades have believed that our civil servants are not up to scratch with their service to the public. It is a position that I do not share personally. I am also aware that those calling for privatization will now feel they were justified. In my humble opinion, that is nothing more than bunkum because our economy is already heavily privatized and we are still in the debt trap.

Many crocodile tears will be shed by the same frauds, who shed tears over the imposition of tuition fees on the poor, mainly black students at Cave Hill, University of the West Indies. These are the same political charlatans who would abolish free bus fares for school children, who were missing school because their parents had no money. They are the same ones who are now trying to convince us that domestic violence is only found among the poor and poorly educated. It follows a pattern that whenever there is a problem within the society, they zoom in on the poor.

The simple truth is that the economy has been in need of desperate restructuring for at least since the mid seventies. The BLP/DLP government has failed at every given opportunity to reform or restructure the economy .We have a system of sophisticated political largesse that caters to the now emerged upper middle class political managers, who have taken friendship and social contacts, to a level of sycophancy, that we have never before witnessed in our island state!

In the mean time, we have deemed poor and economically challenged citizens as the yard fowls and we engage in poking fun at them because it gives us some sadistic pleasure in ridiculing poor black people. Sometimes I ask myself if there is not one single white yard fowl among 280,000 people! We have a BLP/DLP collective that has gotten very little right since independence: housing, roads, the Q.E. H, agriculture, fisheries, water works and a multiplicity of social services have all suffered under inept and visionless so –called leadership coming primarily from within the legal profession.

Even as this current BLP/DLP administration flounders about the place; we still have apologists who are actually convinced that some good will come from George or Roebuck Streets. They are either blind to the reality of our condition or they have voluntarily imbibed a dangerous concoction of BLP/DLP cool aid laced with amnesia and unconditional love.

As we approach fifty years of independence, it is high time that progressive thinkers/citizens go after both the essentially black political managerial class and call to account the dominant white corporate elites and demand that they treat us with some respect. It can no longer be business as usual. The over 3000 civil servants who have now been financially slaughtered by the BLP/DLP, did not bring our island state’s economy to its knees. Quite the opposite because if we did not have a superb public service and if our island state was left totally in the hands of the thirty jokers we have knocking around Parliament, we would have all been in the graveyard ever since.

In any serious democracy, where accountability matters, Mr. Sinkler would be in the ranks of the unemployed since he has failed to even begin to institute any real economic policy; we would be going back to the polls to allow the people to determine if there was indeed a “betrayal”. And perhaps then, we would see the wisdom in electing a real national government as recently stated by Dr. Neville Duncan, (Barbados Today 12/16/13) who had the decency to say that in his considerable estimation, that what is happening would have also happened under the BLP. It has been my long held contention that we Barbadians have the worst kind of one party state – a one party state that we actually think is two parties. Like we all drinking the BLP/DLP cool aid laced with amnesia and unconditional love.

74 responses to “3000 Public Sector Jobs on the Radar”


  1. @bag juice
    Thanks. Clearly there are three different union voices

    BWU – this is only a proposal (albeit due to take effect in 15 days)

    NUPW – we’re talking amongst ourselves and will continue negotiating and only then will we make a clear statement

    CTUSAB – no layoffs at all…even though we know things are dire

    I’m more confused than when it first started. Murrells’ Thursday comments were a tad bit more conciliatory.

    Thing about this is, the Unions are willing to push for a pay cut rather than losses, which is exactly what they went on strike for 2 decades ago.Added to that they refused to ask for a pay increase for the last 4 years, while everything else (taxes, prices, new taxes) around us increased….all in the name of saving jobs…

    and, clearly, no one can guarantee that this “first tranche” and “further” wage freeze will get us out the mess or be all that’s needed

    Something stinks to high heaven. Somebody needs to get some bodies around a table and get a freaking solution that serves everybody’s long term interest and that can actually be communicated

    Where oh where is the real leadership.

    Just Observing


  2. @Observing

    Barbados obviously has been instructed it needs to send a strong message to the external markets that we are serious about hauling in the deficit. We have passed the point of negotiating because we are not holding any Aces. We need money (forex) and we need fiscal and monetary “leadership” this is the bottomline.


  3. @David
    That much is clear. Clear for the last 2 years. My disbelief is the charade being played out by our union leaders. Either get on board and announce so, or present alternatives and stick to them.

    Does anyone really believe that the unions have a bargaining position or leverage given what’s needed to “satisfy” the external markets?

    or that they have political capital amongst its members that they can rally?

    or that they have general goodwill based on previous government promises that were kept?

    They should spare us the sideshow let us get on with the solutions.

    Just observing


  4. @Bag juice –Cedric Murrell has always be a yes person to both political parties, he lives off the backs of the workers for years do you recall when the DLP won the elections he was promoted ,Walter Maloney with no qualifications except the Masters in Yardfowl was promoted from clerk to Customer service manager an S5 job and has been selling out the workers long ago but NUPW members deserves such when they had the chances to get rid of him for running up an $18,000.cell phone bill ,they allowed the one foot man Denis Clarke tell them its a lie ,yet he never produced the bill to prove its a lie but thanks to some one I have a copy which was faxed to my good mate . C T U SAB has been using the government funds to pay wages and salaries ,entertainment ,travelling ,overseas travel and cell phone bills for Cedric Murrell and DENNIS De-Peize , do you expect the yard fowls to go against they masters ,Cedric son has been given a teaching job and we can go on and on –tell the to cut the subvention from CUTSAB and we shall save some money ,tell them to make Walter Maloney repay the $5000, cell phone bill at NHC that’s two clerks salaries .tell them to cut their salaries by 30% and not the tax free allowances they get ,tell them to cut the consultants ,the personal aids ,tell the to cut out the food they get in Parliament ,tell them to send home the people they hired in January and Febuary 2013,


  5. @erice, I agree with your posting 100%. NUPW members deserve what they are getting. I now see Cedric on CBC TV 7:30 news talking “bull shi………te”. Look at the double downgrade Moodys gave B’dos last light after Stinkliar announce all those measures of retrenchment and cuts in allowance in a Ministerial statement last Friday. Clearly, something is definitely wrong with what he is/has proposing to bring back the Barbadian economy to its glory days.

  6. are-we-there-yet? Avatar
    are-we-there-yet?

    It would appear that the new US$150 Million dollar bond which the Government has successfully floated was successful substantially because of Chris Sinckler’s promise of strong action, especially the 3,000 layoffs.

    The GoCB and CS should be congratulated for having engineered this loan although the situation is still on a knife edge for the medium term.

    Now what does this development tell us of the rearguard action being fought by the Unions, seemingly inspired by the PM, for the Government to pull back on the layoffs and instead institute an across the board wage cut?

    Are the Unions really serious or are they engaged in a somewhat transparent PR exercise for their gullible members since the word on the street is suggesting that the layoffs could be more substantial and might be implemented along with across-the-board wage cuts?

    Was the proposal by the PM a disingenuous one, or was he really serious about suggestions from the unions having the possibility of being used to make significant changes to the Chris Sinckler package?

    The new loans should perhaps keep the economy going to about the end of the financial year, I am told. So where do we go from here? The faux societal approach by the Unions channeling the PM or the Chris Sinckler “Economy” approach that uses, inter alia, Austerity shock measures to get the International financiers on board to achieve some measure of short term stability? Will the Society trump the Economy? Could this battle result in the removal of one of the Ministerial protagonists?

    Of course the answers are actually no brainers. But the Unions would have us think otherwise at least for the first question.


  7. how can this DLP cut wages and salaries and freeze increments —trade unions cannot agree with no government with any tdohing that is against the law –remember the Gladwyn king case–and what make it so stupid is that that stupid crook Dennis Clarke was deputy general secretary at nupw –no public officer should agree to such and then its an individual issue –cut the ministers and political appointees salaries by 30%–they can agree to put that 30% back into the treasury and give up their travel and entertainment allowances –while Dennis Clarke can tell nupw to sell the duty free car and donate the funds to a children home –do these along with the other that I have out lined before and we will see some savings


  8. The Sunday Sun of December 15, 2013 carried a photograph of Dennis Clarke leaving a meeting of the NUPW’s executive. He was carrying a set of books under his arm; one was entitled, “Employment Protection at Common Law” which had a marker sticking out. That might seem perfectly normal and might even impress some. But I started to wonder what he was doing with that book when you consider that he was supposed to have been advising a public service union whose membership is governed by: the Public Service Act; the Constitution; the Administrative Justice Act; and the Employment Rights Act.

    That common law book does not apply to the Public Service or statutory boards. The man was posing with the WRONG book.

    >


  9. http://www.nationnews.com/articles/view/ctusab-against-job-cuts/ …BY RICKY JORDAN | SUN, DECEMBER 22, 2013 – 12:12 AM …The Congress of Trade Unions and Staff Associations of Barbados (CTUSAB) is not supporting Government’s plan to lay off 3 000 workers and rejects the proposal to freeze public workers’ increments … Instead it wants national dialogue among the Social Partners – labour unions, private sector and Government – to develop a protocol on recovery and growth, similar to the Prices And Incomes Protocol coming out of the 1991 economic crisis…

    Minister Sinckler, as I said earlier, crossroads…, inaction…, regret…


  10. Countrymen and Women our country’s problems are escalating at such a rapid rate that I am fearful for this island. Barbadians find your backbones sit up, stand up and PLEASE be fearless and LISTEN TO MIA. She is the only one making sense. The MOF MUST GO! PUT THIS COUNTRY FIRST! We have the most INCOMPETENT group of persons in charge of this island’s affairs. Yet another downgrade and the flippancy continues. WE HAVE TO DO WHAT IS RIGHT! WE HAVE TO TAKE A STAND NOW! I am weeping for my country! LISTEN PLEASE LISTEN!

  11. Victor R Callender Avatar
    Victor R Callender

    I continue to read all of your comments, and I am in awe of the intellectual fuel of all of you. As learned as you all are, please be mindful, that the role of government is never to create jobs. Government’s role is to provide for the welfare and common good of the masses. The private sector creates jobs, and premised on the legislative prowess of government, the private sector affords a country’s citizens with decent living wages, contingent on strong trade union coercion. The upwardly mobile, Barbadian intelligencia, now has the moral mandate to insist of constructive dialogue, to assist a timid, if not otherwise incompetent political establishment, in coming to terms with the troubling economic fiasco, facing Barbados. Folks, the “Ship of State” lies awkwardly in rough seas, tantamount to absolute fatalism. With combined efforts from both the current party in power, and the opposition, conversations should be meaningful, and public discourse evocative, in order to prevent the absolute collapse of one of the most stable democracies on the planet earth, Barbados’ democracy. Let our collective ideas, and our manifestations be the “Lighthouse ” in this sea of disaster.


  12. The writing is on the wall for the island…..I must commend Corey and David on brasstacks today for asking Mia all the right questions, that was moderation at it’s best. In saying that, let’s hope the BLP (all of the paid politicians) is really taking the situation as seriously as Mia is alluding to….it would be interesting to hear what the DLP has to say in it’s defense, not that anyone cares, the lies they have been telling are unconscionable, they can now only come with the truth to cleanse themselves.


  13. @well, Well. Yes the programme was good, however I had a problem with David Ellis interrupting Ms. Mottley when she is making a very important point causing her to lose her trend of though at times. However, I must say that I am much clearer on really what is happening in this island. “We in ducks guts”.

  14. Victor R Callender Avatar
    Victor R Callender

    BLP OR DLP, no political party can fix this global economic disaster. It’s bigger than Freundel or Mia. You could resurrect Barrow, both Adams’ and whoever else, and still not solve this global economic crisis. In fairness to the DLP, they inherited a system in decline, from the BLP, and yes from the stellar economic mind of Owen S Arthur, on whose watch the economic decline in Barbados started. It was exacerbated here in this current administration, but the fiasco is multi-tiered, and perhaps evolved through a disastrous system of economic flaws in the USA. Do most of you know, that the US FEDERAL RESERVE, has been pumping Eighty Five (85)Billion Dollars a month into the US economy? Ok then, had the US Federal Reserve not been bandaiding the United States economic woes every month, does anyone out there believe that the US economy would not have totally collapsed. Folks the city of Detroit, at one time the fourth Largest city in America, is bankrupt. Do not be caught up in the political minutia offered by Mia Mottley or Freundel Stuart, or any politician. Look at the reality of what faces not only Barbados, but the entire global financial diaspora. America is printing money left and right, but guess what, at the end of the day, super hyper inflation will come and knock on America’s door as well. What has bit Greece, Portugal, Spain, Ireland in the butt, will bite most developing countries. What developing countries should do, is look to the Singaporean “Asian Tiger” model, and prepare within the prescribes of that model, embracing fiscal restraint and total economic restructuring. Politicians, must say to the Barbadian electorate, that they were wrong in their economic forecast, and that bajans must now, right now embrace economic austerity measures. By being austere, bjans would have in time even allowd for the country to embrace green technology, and other Island saving sustainable effects. For example, Brazil fuels its vehicles, from the by-product of its sugar manufacturing industry. Barbados, because of our history, produced premium sugar cane, and there must be some agro-economist and researchers on the Island of Barbados, who can lend some knowledge to Brazil’s eco friendly fuel industry and the ways that it can benefit Barbados. What is needed is an “Economic Compact” by which both political parties must adhere , or be replaced. Bajans must operate within their own purviews of numeracy. Don’t spend frivously, and for god’s sake, return to the family values, that solidifed Barbados, as a leader in the caribbean community. The systemic problems that plague or Isalnd nation, go to the core, of our peoples social fabric.. Social change and reconditioning, reshaping, retooling or collective consciousness, would lend to building not only economically, but allowing us to drive the ideological mandates for the 21st century.


  15. Well stated Victor.


  16. Bagjuice..he was enthusiastic, but i believe he meant well, you cannot give any politician time to organize their thoughts or they will digress from the question, dodge, parry and still don’t answer the question, she was mildly backed against the wall why I believe she was so forthcoming, it worked out well and obviously people will now see Mia in a different light.


  17. The private sector agency has sided with Mis’s call to establish an elite group to build consensus and strategy in the country. Will the government get on board? After years in the post global recession era it seems moronic to be still searching for consensus between the private and public sector.

  18. Victor R Callender Avatar
    Victor R Callender

    There must be emphatic change across the board of both political parties. Listen, I don’t pretend to have all of the answers, but I am willing to listen, the operative word, being “Listen.” Barbadian politicians don’t listen, and when they do, mostly at election time, it’s with selective hearing. Mia Mottley may offer the argument for change, but change to what, and why? Things can never be the way they were. The international global economic reality, suggest downward economic trends, for at least the next five years. All of the market analyses that exist out there present dismal economic growth in most developed and devoloping countries. The chinese, though they may own US debt, are struggling with their own internal economic mechanisms, relative to scarcity of materials, to be had within their country. What will plague china, will be the provision of satisfactory wages over the next five years, for its expanding middle class, and the ruinous climatic conditions, relative to acid rain and smog that has enveloped, and is destroying their eco system. I am saying all of that to let some here understand, that China will soon be calling for the debt owed to it, and then the chief borrowerers the USA and Africa, will be in dire straights. Several years ago, Andy Grove, the then CEO of Intel, remarked that Barbados was one of the most technologically wired places in the caribbean. I would submit to most of us here, that Barbados, must reinvent it’s ability to manufacture in the cutting edge technological industry. Those who envisioned the monikor “Pride in Industry”at the inception of Independence, knew that in decades to come, we Barbadians would need to send out a clarion call, upon which would rest, “Pride in Industry.” The first rate exemplary education system in Barbados, which has been the envy of not only the caribbean, but the world, stands in a calamitous state. Politicians, who lack the ability to think their way out of a “Wet paper bag” are at the helm of our nation’s future. Bajans, when will we regain the reigns of our collective destiny, our children’s future? When will we decide to be guided by the instincts of our hearts, and speak truth to power? Those who offer the sycophant’s remedy to alignment with these politicians, should be careful. For the most part, it is now them vs us, and guess what, the us happen to be losing teribly. Politicians need to engage with the electorate now, and the old rum shop political dynamics need to be tossed out and tough question should be asked, and answers, expected. Right now, in Barbados, the Queen Elizabeth Hospital does not have enough drugs to provide its patient population, and the Mental Hospital at Black Rock, does not have enough Psychiatric Narcotics to medicate its psychiatric population. Who the hell is running the Ministry of Health? What kind of absolute malfeasance is occurring under the watch of Freundel Stuart? Two major healtcare entities in Barbados, cannot medicate with adequacy, sick and psychologically impaired patients. And do you know why? Because the bills have not been paid, going back to the BLP administration. Acoountability and a mandate for General Accounting Practices (GAP) should be a measurable oversight that’s required for this current administration. The lazy, have been able to rise up and lead the unwilling, in this DLP administration.

  19. PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2013 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad Avatar
    PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2013 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad


  20. In any serious democracy, where accountability matters, Mr. Sinkler would be in the ranks of the unemployed since he has failed to even begin to institute any real economic policy; we would be going back to the polls to allow the people to determine if there was indeed a “betrayal”.

    THE DLP LIED TO THE PEOPLE, HAVE FAILED TO MANAGE THE ECONOMY AND JUST CANNOT MANAGE

    THE DLP SHOULD RESIGN AND CALL FRESH ELECTIONS.
    LET THE PEOPLE DETERMINE WHAT PROGRAMME THEY WILL SUPPORT.

    ALL THE TALK ABOUT SENDING HOME PEOPLE AND CUTTING SALARIES SHOULD CEASE NOW. GET BACK TO THE POLLS.

    THE REAL DISCUSSION SHOULD BE ABOUT SEEKING A FRESH MANDATE.
    THERE MUST BE FRESH ELECTIONS
    THE GOVERNMENT SHOULD RESIGN
    THEY HAVE BETRAYED THE PEOPLE AND CANNOT BE TRUSTED TO KEEP THEIR WORD

    THEY WANT TO CUT THE PUBLIC SERVICE AND CUT SALARIES TOO
    WHO IS GUARANTEE THAT THEY KEEP THEIR WORD ON ANYTHING
    L——I——–A ———R————S
    THIS IS NOT JOKE WE JOKING
    THIS IS SERIOUS BUSINESS

  21. Victor Callender Avatar

    I have listened attentively to Mia Mottley’s statement, relative to the government’s inepititude. and complete malfeasance. The Rt Honourable Freundel Stuart, has with a very simple stroke of poltical calculation allowed the destruction of Chris Sinckler. You see the rising star of Mr. Sinckler is dimming fast, under the wicked watchful eye of Mr. Stuart. The only thing that bajans can do now, is to take to the streets, and demand a dissolution of parliament, and the resurrection of competent leadership in Barbados. “Where there is no vision, the people will perish.”

  22. PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2013 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad Avatar
    PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2013 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad
  23. PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2013 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad Avatar
    PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2013 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad

    oreysandiford.tumblr.com/post/59194866830/taking-us-backwards-robin-hood-budget-bim-in-tights


  24. Please help me. I am looking for recent articles about the deplorable conditions at the Psychiatric hospital. Thank you for your assistance.

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