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BU shares the Caswell Franklyn Nation newspaper column – he is the General Secretary of Unity Workers Union and BU Contributor.
Caswell Franklyn, Head of Unity Workers Union
Caswell Franklyn, Head of Unity Workers Union

NOT ALL BLACK AND WHITE: Unions seize chance for redemption

THE RELATIONS BETWEEN the Government and trade unions in this country has been unnecessarily reduced to [โ€ฆ] a state of government induced chaos.

It would appear that the major unions have delinked from Democratic Labour Party control, leaving the Government rudderless in the sea of industrial relations.

Previously, Government did not see the need to develop any expertise in the area of industrial relations because it relied on its minions who control the decision-making organs of the unions to keep a lid on the simmering cauldron of employee discontent.

It was not unusual to hear commentators, myself included, say that the unions would have been engaged in vigorous battles in defence of workers rights if the Barbados Labour Party were in power.

It had become apparent to all but the purblind that control of the unions was ceded to the DLP, to be used to wrestle power from the BLP, and when in power, to pacify the workers.

Fortunately, the major unions, Barbados Workers’ Union (BWU) and the National Union of Public Workers (NUPW) are under new management, and coupled with falling membership, they were forced to act or witness the demise of their organisations.

The forced retirement of workers from the Barbados Investment and Development Corporation (BIDC) has given the NUPW a platform from which it could start to redeem itself in the eyes of its membership. And with right on its side the union has seized the opportunity with zeal.

The issue in contention is a very simple matter which could be settled without much ado if Government were interested in a resolution on anything but its own terms.

The dispute can be reduced to very basic facts: BIDC is relying on section 8 of the Statutory Boards (Pensions) Act which previously gave the board the power to compulsorily retire workers at any time after they reach 60 years of age; on the other hand, the NUPW is relying on section 8A of the same act, a 2004 amendment, which essentially took away that power from the board and allowed workers to retire at the age at which they could access their full pensions from National Insurance, which is now 66 and a half years.

Even though the amendment is pellicud, I will rely on Hansard to show that Government is being unnecessarily contentious.  The debate took place on December 14, 2004, and according to the official record, the first person to speak on the bill, Hon. Miss M. A. Mottley said and I quote:

โ€œMr Speaker, this amendment before the House today seeks to do the simple thing of amending our Pensions Act such that we remove the compulsory retirement age for public servants from 60 years old to 65 years old.โ€

She went on to explain later in her speech that the amendments were recommendations from a committee that was established to review the Public Service pension arrangements by saying:

โ€œMr. Speaker, that committee recommended that the retirement age at which pension becomes payable in Barbados should be harmonised with the retirement age at which pension is payable under the National Insurance and Social Security Schemes of Barbados.

โ€œI want to repeat that point because what we are seeking to do now is to take two separate pension arrangements and ensure that there is a harmonisation of the pension rights and arrangements thereto. The retirement age at which pension becomes payable under the Public Service of Barbados should be harmonised at the retirement age at which it becomes payable under the national insurance and Social Security Scheme.

โ€œMr Speaker, this is going to be done in a gradual way. It would mean that this would permit a change in the compulsory age of retirement from 60 to 65, and ultimately by the year 2018 going to the age of 67 years old. This does not in any way, Mr Speaker, change the right of persons who now have the right to take early retirement at 55 years old.โ€

It does not change, and this is perhaps the most important point for those who are communicating this generally to the public, that this does not change the right of persons who may now retire early at 55 years.

If you still wanted to retire at 60, 61, 62, 63 or 64, you could go ahead under this legislation, but you must retire at 65.

The only two entities that are not covered by this amendment โ€“ and that is because their arrangements are normally dealt with by the Constitution and we would continue to treat to new arrangements for them in the Constitution โ€“ would be the Auditor General and  the Director of Public Prosecutions who, under the Constitution of Barbados must retire at the age of 62 years. They do not fall under this amendment . . . .โ€œ

When this bill was debated there were three members of the current Cabinet that were present in the House as Opposition members.  Surely, at least one of them should have remembered.

Government must now do the right thing, that is, admit the mistake and let industrial peace reign, not on its terms or on the unionโ€™s terms but in accordance with the law.

– See more at: http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/69786/black-white-unions-seize-chance-redemption#sthash.wuSQGNeq.dpuf


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150 responses to “The Caswell Franklyn Column – Unions Seize Chance for Redemption”


  1. NOT ALL BLACK AND WHITE: Unions seize chance for redemption

    And the Caption Says it All

    More about political opportunism than the Rights of the workers, but sadly at the expense of a nation.


  2. @ ac
    Your mindless writing again , go take a bath and pray to your God

  3. de Ingrunt Word Avatar
    de Ingrunt Word

    AC, after reading the same article above I completely agree with you. This is all about “political opportunism than the Rights of the workers”.

    The management of the BIDC and the Barbados Government have decided to disregard the Pensions Act amendment and disregard the rights of their employees on the expediency of cost cuts and restructuring.

    It’s clear that every corporation or private enterprise can hire and therefore terminate employees to meet the needs of their operations. The laws are in place to ensure terminations are done in an equitable manner and does not infringe on the employee’s right of a fair termination.

    The Corporation’s management had blown through that promise of equitable and fair termination.

    Thus your assessment of “political opportunism” trampling ” the Rights of the workers” describes their actions perfectly.


  4. OK de igrunt (fool) here we go again de govt .. the Fact is there are varying interpretations of the Law the law was not clear in definition when it was amended and intentionally or unintentionally left some hanging chads that need to be remove. It therefore begs the question does a nation needs to suffer because of interpretation of the law?


  5. On one side of the equation we have the government following homegrown IMF policies to cut subsidies and amalgamate state agencies and on the other side we have a union working hard to protect its base. The workers are caught in the middle.

  6. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    If it is the BIDC dismissals are merely one aspect of the IMF diktats, then the matter could have been easily solved by structured redundancies. Competent legal advice would have urged that this be done in accordance with the ERA2012 on some acceptable premise such as LIFO, rather than on the basis of advanced age which, as Mr Bush Tea has rightly suggested elsewhere, is perhaps the most ineffective way of reducing a staff complement to ensure continued productivity.


  7. @Jeff

    What was allowed to happen at the BIDC i.e. creative/manufactured dismissal occurs all the time in the private sector. The incumbent minister is knowledgeable about such a practice after hobnobbing in the Rotary and elsewhere.

  8. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    Maybe, David, but you would agree that the private sector is far less public about it. And the ERA permits fair redundancies, once the necessary procedures are complied with.

  9. de Ingrunt Word Avatar
    de Ingrunt Word

    AC, I can only feel empowered to be called a fool by someone like you who responds to comments of details with stupid name calling.

    Here you are attempting to pass yourself off as a mature, thinking adult but daily display how puerile and immature you are as a person and how completely inane you are as a political writer.

    Nations have continually suffered on the interpretation of laws throughout the history. Government trample their own laws often and there comes a point when the citizens say I am not accepting it anymore. Thus starts confrontation.

    Major national suffering can start from the most innocuous of bus rules disobeyed as they can from a major revelation of a leader’s misdeeds.

    It would be helpful if you could see the BIDC issue for the practical and real concerns that it presages and speak to it sensibly as a DLP mouthpiece rather that maintain your inane interpretations . Hope springs eternal, I imagine.

    My real pain frankly is that there are others like you on the BLP side that perpetuate this political name calling stupidity rather than deal with the facts.

  10. de Ingrunt Word Avatar
    de Ingrunt Word

    Jeff/David, I would add that when these matters arise in private enterprise it’s also unlikely that the country gets discombobulated in this manner.

    One expects a wise government to recognize that they cannot operate as cavalier as some private entity. But then again they likely are wise enough they just got very complacent.


  11. In 2014, Donville Inniss publically stated his opposition to a proposal that government ministers should take a salary cut, reason being he had bills to pay and his children to send to university.

    Low and behold, he is now firm in his stance that those BIDC employees, aged 60+, should be forcibly retired. Iโ€™m sure he is aware that if they apply for NI pension at 60, they stand to lose .5% each month, which means they would have a significantly reduced pension.

    I guess they donโ€™t have bills to pay as well.


  12. BU cannot wait to hear if the argument of age discrimination is tabled next week and importantly how the Court responds.We have the political partisans on the blog who are pro same sex and label those who oppose as ignorant and insensitive to the civil liberties all individuals should enjoy yet have no problem turning on a dime to disregard the age discrimination argument tossed up by BIDC.


  13. Jeff Cumberbatch July 12, 2015 at 9:59 AM #
    “And the ERA permits fair redundancies, once the necessary procedures are complied with.”

    Isn’t that the crux of the matter? BIDC / Government did not follow good industrial relations procedures as set out in the ERA and previous practice.


  14. David please address those bloggers who use clandestine comments to attack Ac/S please be adviced like NUPW ac will strike back accordingly and effectively.
    One watch dog hasa been acid in his commentary towards ac , but i have it within my where it all to wag a verbal war against those of like mindedness that can cause a Stink.

    The interpretation of Law is what is at stake unfortunately those that have a political agenda would obviously shelved that notion in order to gain the political advantage, i hope the court would be wise enough to steer away from being involved in the minutia of age discrimination but move ground forward with the accountability on those who wrote the law without clarity, ordering them to revisit or rewrite the law accepting or removing those blindspots that stands against the rear view mirror,
    However it is my belief that if the court sees (itself )as a right to intervene the court having wade through both sides of the issue may indeed give benefit of doubt to the workers standing firm on the grounds of Workers Right and also to send a message to the law makers that due diligence is the formal and correct apparatus of the law for good governance
    Having said the above i still do believe that the actions taken were unnessary and uncalled for that would scare and divide a nation for a long time.


  15. @AC
    We know your writing are Stink, it come from a rotten minded he /she or thing


  16. The NUPW should watch this video and be very carefulโ€ฆโ€ฆ. Hahahahaha!


  17. What is wrong with this statement for 5 marks.

    BIDC Promises to Adhere to Court’s Ruling

    Previous Post <<

    The Barbados Investment and Development Corporation (BIDC) has issued a statement confirming that it will adhere to the Courtโ€™s ruling on its dispute with the National Union of Public Workers.

    The matter is to be filed in the Court by the BIDC on Monday, July 13th 2015.

    The statement follows the breakdown in talks during an eight hour meeting with the Minister of Labour, Senator Dr Esther Byer and the NUPW.

    It maintained that the BIDCโ€™s action to retire the workers was in accordance with the laws of Barbados, as the entity was following the Statutory Boards (Pensions) Act.

    Chairman of the BIDC, Benson ‘Ricky’ Straker says during the meeting, โ€œIt was proposed that in an effort to alleviate any concerns of a protracted Court action beyond September 30th 2015, the BIDC was willing to extend the pay period and all other benefits of the ten workers who were retired from September 30, 2015 to December 31st 2015.  However, the BIDCโ€™s proposal was adamantly rejected by the National Union of Public Workers.โ€

    Friday, July 10, 2015 3:43:00 PM


  18. Set standards for statutory boards
    THERE HAS BEEN no widespread announcement by Government of appointments to the boards of the various statutory corporations and companies following its re-election in February. Board members under the last administration โ€“ even though the same Democratic Labour Party (DLP) administration โ€“ should not expect to be automatically reappointed.
    So, while we await the announcements, we want to take up an important point raised last week by Senator Harry Husbands, Parliamentary Secretary in the Ministry of Education who highlighted the need to ensure that such board members are trained and equipped to undertake their duties. We are in total agreement with this suggestion.
    For too long, under both DLP and Barbados Labour Party administrations, many such appointments have been based on neither competence nor ability. We understand the need to reward party loyalists, but also appreciate certain standards must be set and maintained. The ministers of Government and their advisers must in some responsible way act as a nominating committee, coming up with the correct names for the right reasons.
    They should reject the idea of taking someone without an understanding, the experience or knowledge to lead and or comprise the membership of a board. We must also dismiss the notion that because some appointees are from the legal or accounting professions they know what they are doing. The training to which Senator Husbands alluded is going to be a necessity.
    High on the agenda for the directors of the various state agencies and school boards will be the issue of accountability. Despite not being shareholders the same due diligence applied to directors of private or public held companies must obtain.
    These directors must understand the need to have sustainable institutions which can survive long after they demit office. So we would expect the directors of state boards to understand the importance of ethics and compliance, risk management and transparency.
    One of the troubling features of state boards has been the tardiness with completing and delivering of annual reports. All the corporate governance standards now mandatory for both private and publicly-held businesses must obtain with state-owned agencies.
    Most importantly these boards must appreciate that their duties are strategic; the executive management are paid to undertake day-to-day operations.
    The role of the directors for state agencies โ€“ whether a commercial enterprise, a non-profit agency or even a school board โ€“ is a serious responsibility. Board governance can be critical to the success or failure of an organization.
    NationNews.com ยฉ Nation Publishing Co. Limited 2013
    Monday May 6th 2013

  19. de Ingrunt Word Avatar
    de Ingrunt Word

    David, thanks for highlighting this article from the NationNews. I must admit it has a few trigger phrases that always cut me to the core.

    I agree that “the need to reward party loyalists’ can oft times see people on Boards who bring no knowledge or expertise and are there simply to be the eyes and ears of the Minister or other.

    But if I grasp the writer’s intent properly I sit amazed that he/she is suggesting that a board member should require ‘training’ in “accountability…ethics and compliance, risk management and transparency”.

    Other than risk management, those things are first taught in Sunday School, reinforced in secondary school and drilled home at university or on the job if a degree was skipped.

    By the time you reach the stage of life to be on a board one expects that you are quite aware of all those aspects of life. And of course when appointed to the Board you will be (should be) given the protocols of your role with clearly defined do’s and don’ts.

    That’s should be the sum of training for practical, business and life savvy board members.

    The entire reason for being on a BoD in the context of a government corp or school should be to engage the wide and different experiences of the board members to guide the entity to fulfill is goals and objectives well. If they are there simply to validate some legal need and to rubber stamp a Minister’s directives then why all the fuss.

    For schools in particular a key part should be about assistance with fund raising and providing opportunities for the students from contacts and experience of the board members.

    For all technical (risk issues) or specific operational Board matters the CEO/Principal or one of the subject matter managers or an outside adviser can be used to clarify and explain details. The Board then draws on its individual expertise to make the practical, ‘strategic’ decisions so that they “…have sustainable institutions which can survive long after they demit office”.

    This matter of training is in my view political double talk. Sen Husbands is really saying: These fellas better do what we want them to do and we gotta have a session wid them to let them understand that. LOL.

  20. Smooth Chocolate Avatar
    Smooth Chocolate

    i really do not care if the NUPW redeems themselves or not, i will not be rejoining that union. i am giving serious consideration the Unity


  21. @ David

    “BU cannot wait to hear if the argument of age discrimination is tabled next week and importantly how the Court responds”

    This raises some critical questions —

    In Barbados is State and the Judiciary really separate ? and
    Remember that Chief Justice was hand picked and appointed by the State when it was necessary to change parliamentary rules for the appointment.

    I suspect the COURT, not being totally independent from the Government, will be giving it’s Judgement after careful consultation with appropriate government ministers. If David thinks the Court will come up with a TRUE legal and not Politically motivated decision then he likely believes in the tooth fairy as well.


  22. The NUPW has called the shop stewards et al to a 2PM meeting tomorrow to get an update and discuss phase 3. Isn’t it ironic the PM advised he had gone through the phases quickly when dealing with the AX matter unbeknownst to the public. BU wonders if the strategy of dealing in phases was by accident or design.


  23. @Wily Coyote

    Decisions by the Court must suffer peer review and there is court of appeal.


  24. Prime Minister Freundel Stuart’s Speech at the NUPW’s 70th Annual General Conference

    Published on March 28, 2014 by Prime Minister’s Office


    Prime Minister, Freundel Stuart. (FP)Prime Minister, Freundel Stuart. (FP)

    Feature Address By Prime Minister, Freundel Stuart, At The 70th Annual General Conference Of The National Union Of Public Workers On Thursday, March 27, 2014

    Members of Cabinet, Members of the Diplomatic Corps, Permanent Secretaries/Heads of Department, President of the National Union of Public Workers โ€“ Brother Walter Maloney, General Secretary โ€“ Brother Dennis Clarke, Deputy General Secretary โ€“ Sister Roslyn Smith, 3rd Vice President โ€“ Brother Charles Bostic, Chaplain โ€“ Reverend DeVere Murrell, Specially Invited Guests, Ladies and Gentlemen.

    I was pleased to receive, and even more pleased to accept, your invitation to deliver this address at the 70th anniversary conference of the National Union of Public Workers. Three score years and ten is an important milestone in any life, whether of a person or of an organisation. As we celebrate what is a Platinum Anniversary for the NUPW, let us not forget the long and difficult road that it has travelled; the challenges that it has faced and the successes that it has registered; and even the many lives that the NUPW has built.

    The NUPW began life in 1944 as the Barbados Civil Service Association. This was a mere seven years after the 1937 disturbances, which led to the Moyne Commission whose report was published in 1945, the same year the Second World War ended and the Cold War began. 1944 was also three years after the formation of the Barbados Workers Union in 1941.

    Inviting a politician to address the NUPW in this anniversary year is significant when one considers that the two main agents of change thrown up by the disturbances of the 1930s were the mass political party and the trade union. These two institutions were key in the major social, political and economic developments in Barbados over the last 65 to 70 years, since the hundred years that had elapsed between Emancipation in 1838, and 1938, had not seen much change of direct benefit to the workers. The workersโ€™ agenda was lagging behind in education, health, housing, transport, the provision of a social safety net, economic enfranchisement and other major respects.

    Aided for an appreciable part of that time period by the enabling features of a Cold War environment, political parties and trade unions promoted mass based education, accessible, available and affordable health care, the provision of housing solutions for the mass of the population and a social safety net.

    The challenges faced by the Barbados Civil Service Association and other trade unions in their early years derived from the fact that 100 years after Emancipation, they still had to fight for the benefits which Emancipation was supposed to provide. As the trade unions could not secure these benefits by themselves, they had to work in association with political parties in government. Since Governments had to take the lead, the public sector workers had a special role to play in the forward movement of Barbados and the other islands in the Caribbean. These two forces, therefore, have co-authored the development of modern Barbados.

    In April 1964 the Trade Union Act was passed revising and consolidating all of the laws relating to trade unions, and in that same year a Strike Committee of the Civil Service Association was set up. In 1969 the name of the Association was changed to the National Union of Public Workers.

    When we review the post-Independence period up to the present, we take note that the NUPW had to face four major downturns in the economy of Barbados: the first between 1973-75, resulting from the oil crisis of 1973; the second between 1981-83 resulting from the second oil crisis; the third between 1991-93 resulting from the Gulf War; and the current crisis from 2008 to the present as a result of the financial crisis in the United States of America.

    In the majority of these crises the union demonstrated a commendable sense of responsibility. I say the majority and not all because in 1976, the NUPW demanded a 60 % salary increase at a time when the country was facing its largest current account deficit since the year 1961. Salaries had to be legislated on that occasion at 35 % at the bottom and 12 ยฝ % at the top. Then, by intriguing coincidence, after the General Election of that year, the General Secretary of the Union was appointed a Parliamentary Secretary in the new administration.

    So, in the face of the tremendous challenges of the past 70 years, the NUPW could not have survived if it had not benefitted from astute leadership, rationally assessing the situation in Barbados through the years, and then drawing carefully from the philosophy and practices of the international Trade Union Movement to meet these challenges, in the process developing and strengthening the negotiation and other life skills that were so urgently needed.

    This sense of responsibility has led the NUPW to survive all tests of its resilience and viability, as it has always understood that it had to focus not only on wages and salaries but on other conditions of service. Matters like training for public workers, and legislative protection under laws such as the Safety and Health at Work Act, have increasingly taken centre stage in its fight for workers rights.

    The conditions under which public servants work have a direct impact on both their wellbeing and their productivity. Governmentโ€™s rental bill for office space for public workers is fast approaching $80 million per annum, proof, were any needed, that accommodation is being treated as a key condition of service, and one for which the NUPW has been prepared to fight. Government continues to demonstrate its commitment to remedying the serious accommodation problem, with modern facilities being provided at Warrens and at Webster Business Park, among others.

    Other related non-wage/non-salary issues have engaged the attention of the NUPW in recent times. These relate to the right of public officers to receive a pension at all, having been dismissed for misconduct, or to receive it immediately, in circumstances where that officerโ€™s post in the public service has been abolished. The judgement of the Caribbean Court of Justice in the Winton Campbell case has presented a particular problem for the Union, in that the Court has decided that pension rights do not accrue immediately on the abolition of a post but that the affected public servant must wait until he or she has attained the pensionable age. Both of these matters continue to engage the Governmentโ€™s careful attention since the implications for public expenditure cannot be ignored as the pension bill of the Government continues to spiral upwards.

    Examples abound of the extended scope of matters that occupy the attention of the NUPW today, and at every stage what stands out is the maturity of this trade union, even as it relentlessly defends the interests of its members”

    Thumbs up for the NUPW from the prime minister himself.


  25. Minister Lowe has sought to use private trucks to pickup garbage. My questions to him:
    1) Are these new-found sanitation workers immunized?
    2) Are these new-found sanitation workers educated in the collection, handling and disposal of garbage?
    3) Which routes will they operate and what time?
    4) How frequent will these pickups be scheduled?

    Listen Lowe, You are playing with the health of this country!


  26. I am taking bets people.

    Will the PM speak or “inject himself” on this BIDC matter?

    Stuart strikes me as being very stubborn. He is as obstinate as an ass.


  27. The Nation newspaper reporting minister Donville Iiniss will meet tomorrow to avert strike action. Do we smell a pull back in the offing ?

  28. Caswell Franklyn Avatar
    Caswell Franklyn

    Maybe, he read my column and realised that they are wrong.


  29. Pictures were shown tonight of the Minister of Labour in New York at a “Friends of the DLP event”.

    No wonder she dispose of this matter so quickly………….I cannot get it solved and I am not missing my trip! So off I go!


  30. @Caswell Franklyn,

    I heard the figure the IMF recommended the government’s work force be cut by is 10,000.


  31. The following excerpts were taken from an article on page 9 of the Sunday, July 12, 2015 edition of the Barbados Advocate, entitled: โ€œLabour v. capital, or political struggle?โ€ written by known DLP yard-fowl, R. E Guyson Mayers in his weekly column, โ€œA Guyโ€™s View.โ€

    โ€œIt is obvious that no strike is productive economically. It is also obvious that strike action may be of tremendous value politically.โ€

    โ€œTHE FACT THAT WAS A LABOUR STRIKE LED BY POLITICAL FIGURES speaks volumes of how useful they think it is for them.โ€

    Mayers went on to imply that, under the prevailing industrial climate, government should take example from Ronald Reagan, who, in August 1981, โ€œfired more than 11,000 air traffic controllers who ignored his order to return to work.โ€

    โ€œReagan branded the strike illegal. He threatened to fire any controller who failed to return to work within 48 hours. Federal judges levied fines of $1 million per day against the union.โ€

    โ€œIn carrying out his threat, Reagan also imposed a lifetime ban on rehiring the strikers.โ€

    โ€œI never thought that I would see any wisdom in a Reagan or Thatcher approach to handling labour unions, but I am afraid that the Barbados Government may now feel that it has no choice but to take that approach, both in self defence, and in defence of the country.โ€

    Since being elected as the government in 2008, this DLP administration has demonstrated that they are vehemently opposed to criticism. The party and their supporters are quick to label any organization or individual who may offer an opinion contrary to theirs, as being politically motivated or a member of the BLP.

    What is disturbing is the fact that such characterizations are often followed by pejorative criticisms, laced with many negative overtones.

    It seems as though the DLP believes they have the God given right to be government of Barbados for life, because they are alleged to have introduced โ€œfree secondaryโ€ education, national insurance scheme, welfare and the NHC.

    It also amazes me how these people believe EVERYTHING they do is CORRECT, giving us the impression they are PERFECT. Please be reminded Jesus is the only perfect one who walked this earth.

    The DLP and their supporters are indeed a unique group of individuals.

  32. Harold Yearwood Avatar
    Harold Yearwood

    The president of NUPW can’t stop talking? He like to hear he self on radio? He is the same one who it is said call the acting GSM ‘geratric’ with cronic sickness?
    Boy stop the talk and if there’s any action then do. You hypocrite


  33. Harold Yearwood July 13, 2015 at 7:41 AM #

    โ€œThe president of NUPW canโ€™t stop talking? He like to hear he self on radio? He is the same one who it is said call the acting GSM โ€˜geratricโ€™ with cronic sickness? Boy stop the talk and if thereโ€™s any action then do. You hypocriteโ€ฆโ€

    Your contribution definitely proves my point.


  34. If the NUPW position has no merit why is it all the unions have supported the position and minister Donville who indicated before his trip to Colombia said he done with that has reopened the matter at the BIDC?


  35. Interesting observations: the PRO Alf Padmore was ignorant about the deployment of the green SSA recyclable truck and the fact it collected garbage in.Ch Ch East.


  36. BU never told us that Gregory Nicholls a big time BLP yard fowl is NUPW’s lawyer. Its his right to ply his trade and the union’s right to hire him. The crux is that Nicholls a BLP loser at every turn cannot be an honest broker in this debacle. Its like Mia Mottley attacking Four Seasons and the public recently hearing from Sincklair and Donville that she is a lawyer in the project raking in millions. Where is the full disclosure and the public’s right to know. The attorney client relations are not the problem the problem is the public must have the complete picture so that they can factor in the political dimensions. How can you expect the Nicholls boy to be the NUPW lawyer and his political leanings be completely left out of his views on a political issue like a national strike. It cant happen will never happen. The NUPW was said to be a front for the DLP when Maloney and Clarke were there its obvious a turnaround is taking place and the tight shirt guy with Nicholls in tow are now leading a NUPW/BLP charge.


  37. David
    Thank you for the opportunity to read Jeff Cumberbatch’s weekly column.As I indicated previously,I found the Advocate so biased in favor of this present administration,it wasn’t worth my effort.
    Artaxerxes quotes from Guyson Mayers,a known die hard dem who is recommending that all the strikers be fired and none of them rehired.Well,well.No wonder he was made chair of the PSC and recommended to the GG,that Darwin Dottin having attained the age of 63,can be pensioned out of his position of CoP by virtue of his age.You see how this thing with BIDC coming back to bite Mayers ass!Not only Mayers but the whole of the Bajan workforce including judges.Did not David Thompson refuse to extend David Simmons’s tenure as CJ because of his age!
    Age discrimination is against the law and it can affect anybody,so Guyson Mayers if you are suggesting that Stuart fire everybody who withdraw their labour,you Mayers are a big fool and why am I not surprised that you are also a big ‘stinking’Dem as Bree would say it.


  38. First and foremost the govt would do all is earthly possible to protect the best interest of the country and people even if it means calling out private individuals to clean up the garbage in the meanwhile the NUPW can strike all they want and become servant of whichever master serves their best interest when the bills have to be paid. This is going to come down to a test driven by patience and lack of financial resolve


  39. @ Ac
    Your beloved DLP should have no problem with garbage clean up, they have yard ducks like you, take in and put out garbage daily, the best interest for the country, would be for all DLP farm yards ducks be pen in St. John near the Church yard


  40. The PM has threatened to invoke certain powers under the laws of Barbados to arrest the IR climate.


  41. Wow, I heard the PM at 12.30………………..the man sounded angry and seems ready to show how spiteful and vindictive dems are! Do not cross these dems…………..


  42. The voice of reconciliation and of reason does not reside in the thinking of this PM.He is using fighting words which is tantamount to adding fuel to fire.Anybody can do that but a statesman goes the route of the peacemaker whom according to the good book is blessed.Stuart,pastor of the Marchfield Church of God,knows this better than most,but he is one whose philosophy is ‘do as I say,not as I do’!
    If you have aroused the ire of all the unions,it says you are in dangerous waters.The PM must know that this is a battle he stands to lose.He is outnumbered.


  43. The prime minister stated he did not want to comment on the matter to see how far the NUPW would have gone. According to him, Barbadians see for themselves they are prepared to ignore process and shut the country down. If the matter has been referred to the Court with his blessing, why is a minister meeting with the NUPW this evening?

    >


  44. So the PM is carrying out a social experiment to see how far they can push the Unions in Barbados, all at the expense of the country and its citizens? He could only be a jackass.


  45. @ David who wrote “The PM has threatened to invoke certain powers”

    He mussee talk to Bush Tea. lol


  46. The man is so out of touch with reality, Barbados and Bajans it’s becoming a joke. Did you see how the other Heads of State at the Caricom summit looked on in share amazement when he talked his NONSENSE of “not injecting himself in situations”?
    Blasted clown of the highest order.


  47. The Prime Minister sounded like a fool on the news and Goddard on Brasstacks a bigger fool.


  48. yeap guyson Mayers(btw my favourite columnist)hit the nail on the head totally in agreement with every word he said and .listen to this blp yardfowls Reagan won a second term . This fy by nite wunna be upstart leade not saying a pint. In the meantime while the court decides the govt lead by PM Stuart would continue to do the job of managing the country while giving the NUPW strikers and leadership enough rope to hang themselves

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