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Submitted by Heather Cole
Submitted by Heather Cole

History is repeating itself. Early in our history when controlling black slaves and white indentured servants became problematic, the legislature enacted a series of laws as a method of control. By 1650, the infamous set of laws that became known as the Barbados Slave Codes were enacted to maintain the control of the Slaves by the Planter Class.

In 2016, with similar dynamics, history appears to be repeating itself. Again in Barbados, a small group of persons are trying to exert control over the rest of the population. This time the pursuit of that control is over both black and white taxpayers and again Parliament is the mechanism that is being used. However, it is not through the enactment of laws but through the award of lucrative Government contracts and positions on statutory boards. In addition to this, the island’s garbage collection agency has been allowed to fail and the provision of water to the Northern Parishes is following a similar path to failure so that Government can privatize both services.

In essence the problems of Barbados are being cause by a minority of business men who have planned an economic takeover which is being facilitated by a politically weak Government. The problems are all intertwined; they are not separate problems and cannot be dealt with in isolation from each other.

Many have been critical of the Trade Unions of late including myself until I finally understood that you cannot fight the problems of a 2016 Barbados with an institution that was created to solve problems of the 1930’s. I was of the opinion, that the Trade Unions that were birthed during the struggles of the 1930’s were no longer equipped to handle the problems of Barbados which have long surpassed just labor.

I felt that the Unions should increase their mandate until a few days ago, when the Government unceremoniously demoted Akanni McDowall, of the National Union of Public Workers (NUPW). Much has been written about it so I will not linger on it. What I will state is that it is a blessing in disguise.

For several months, something has been staring me full in the face and I could not see it. However, it was this Administration’s action that caused me to “finally see.” I want the Trade Unions to remain trade unions and to fight solely for workers’ rights.

However, I want History to repeat itself again because if trade union activity in Barbados was able to give birth to a political party in 1939, a trade union in 2016 can also give birth to a new political party in Barbados. Even back then the trade unions realized that defending workers’ rights was not enough to effect political action for change in Barbados so they created their own political party.

In essence, the Trade Union must realize that the problems that it is currently faces are much more than labor and that it must do as its predecessors have done and form their own political party. That is the only way they can be on a level playing field with this Government to fight fire with fire. In doing so the trade Union will again create what is no longer evident in Barbados “a labor party.” The dynamics of politics is Barbados can be changed if the trade unions form a political party. For one, it would spell doom for the Democratic Labor Party.

It took an entire generation to see the fruit of the 1930’s Riots which was political independence. That fruit was reaped during the 1960’s. Many of the players who held significant roles in the riots across the British West Indies died by the time their countries gained independence. They never lived to witness it.

Instead of gaining economic independence 2 generations after political independence, we are reverting not to colonialism but to a new form of economic slavery. We must never forget that our labor is for the next generation and not ourselves. The acid test of our success can only be measured by their success. If we do not do what is right for our country now, by default we would have set the next generation up for failure.


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79 responses to “The Barbados Problem: A Trade Union Solution?”


  1. I don’t know the back-story here, but Heather seems confused.

    Privatization is a wise policy for Barbados because the government (a) is overburdened with debt, (b) has clearly mismanaged most of the services it has been trying to provide to its citizens, and (c) is steadily being corrupted by its involvement in key sectors of the economy. The more control government has over the biggest contracts in Barbados, the more our ambitious people will be attracted to politics as the easiest vehicle to personal wealth. That is not the type of political leadership we want.

    Heather likes money, and is trying to use racial politics to take contracts away from the most successful businessmen in the private sector. A better strategy for her might be to (a) look for opportunities in new, emerging lines of business, or (b) bid for contracts in other islands of the Caribbean.

    Just sayin’

  2. Frustrated Businessman aka 'Nation of Laws' my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka ‘Nation of Laws’ my ass.

    The current economic woes of this country are a direct result of the ever-increasing size of the public sector over the past 30 years.

    Like a cancer, the disproportionately large (compared to every nation except Cuba where everyone works for the state) public sector and massive socialist infrastructure have ingrained themselves into every aspect of the Bajan economy to the point where they affect everything we do.

    There would be no rats (public and private sector corrupt operators) if there was no cheese. There would be no BWA headquarters or DAF water tankers if there was no budget to buy them at any price.

    The only way to make the economy function independently from the public sector is to diminish its influence by decreasing its size. The public sector must be marginalised if we are to become an independent economy once again.

    This leaves the perennial problem to deal with: what do we do with the thousands of Bajans whose only employment possibilities are within the public sector? No forced emigration of the late 1800s possible, no WW1 and WW2 British casualties to replace, no Panama Canal to build; in general too many humans in similar situations all over the planet except maybe Canadian farms and forests. Obviously any civil servants we sent to Canada would probably soon be returned with a note saying: “defective, please replace under warranty”.

    These facts leave unions on the back foot: they can swing their weight to keep people employed but, at the end of the day, the employment is mostly unproductive.

    One thing is for sure, the bubble is about to be burst by that most painful stick: reality.


  3. David:
    This piece shall fly pass most of those trade unionists who hold top positions in the trade union movement because most of them are only tooled with the 1930 ideas. Nothing of any great philosophical shift shall occur with this group that hangs like a boil upon the heel of progress in today’s trade union movement. Finally, many of the sheep members are so caught up in their BLP and DLP politics and narrative that change form that end shall almost be impossible.


  4. @ Chad99999…..we read the same article?Giving you the benefit of doubt I say maybe I had a lil too much to drink, a lil too late last night.


  5. Great article but if you think that change will come from the trade unions who are in the bed of promiscuity with government think again because the strategy you proposed regarding trade unions forming their own political party sounds good, but is it realistic?

    Listen! I have been a member of an union for more than three-decades now, and I can say to you without much ambiguity that look back to the 1980s, I see a union focused and ready to fighting for the rights of the working man and woman.

    But from the 1990s and to the present, I have seen the union compromised all that used to stand for and undermining its membership because it to has been caught up in this culture of greedy.

    So don’t put your hopes in a union because true change and history is solid on this one must come from the people.

    And finally , you speak as though the people has no real role in this democracy, and that the people must rely on union or different entities to produce the change needed,when real and lasting sits with the people.

    Bush Tea, Piece Well Well and others, get on BU day after day and talk a load of bullshit about the wrongdoing of the present administration, but what these folks are saying about the present government move the masses? Of course not, because the load of crap these folks here on BU spew daily falls on dead ears, because it hasn’t been able to take root and move the action into action.


  6. Perhaps we can be pointed to the process through which these most successful business men in the private sector got these contracts…..private sector….private process….private contracts…..help ma Chad 99999.


  7. The same way that we cannot approach 2016
    problems with 1930’s solutions; we cannot solve
    our socioe-economic problems with an education
    system that is somewhat irrelevant to our current
    needs. Hence the system will produce the same
    type of leaders that it did in the past.
    While I greatly oppose the demotion of
    the NUPW’s President, I think he was showing his
    political colors and playing from the old political
    play book where the political party jockeying was
    concerned.
    We have too many leaders who want to run with the
    hare and hunt with the hound. The same education syste
    system that produced the leaders before the present
    crop is the same one producing our current crop.
    We need to better educate our future leaders or they
    will continue to make the same mistakes.
    However the government should not be allowed
    to get away with this blatant act of victimization
    against the President of the NUPW.


  8. If only the trade unions did not suffer from the same terminal malady as do the political parties, then Heather may indeed have a point.

    Her argument could equally apply to the Churches -if they were committed to RIGHTEOUSNESS instead of tax-free benefits
    ….to the Credit Unions – if they were committed to their member’s welfare instead of personal ambitions…
    …to businessmen and business associations …if only THEY were concerned with anything more than their selfish albino-centric materialism…

    Only Caswell qualifies … (as Bushie has said all along,) but he missed that boat two years ago… when he failed to BUP


  9. The present economic woes are a combination of past unfettered economic policies unleashed on an vulnerable yet greedy public which was lead /mislead by a false sense of pretentious adversarial untruths that we were punching above our weight assuredly without having to pay severe consequences in the end.
    The Unions back then were all content with all that was happening one can assure that with their end of the bargain not ruffled that the status quo of doing business as usual would not be part of their end game
    Well the chickens have come home to roost hard decisions must be made. Unions would continue to fight tooth and nail against the best interest of the country but the realities would continue to say different and defeated tgeir purpose of interest
    The boat has already drifted far out to sea and bringing it back to shore is all that really matters


  10. William Skinner

    Your pointed regarding the fact that we to need to revamp our educational system in an effort to alter the thinking of our current crop of leades, sounds good when spoken in words. So my question to you is this: how would you going about revamping our educational system to attract the ideal leaders you have in mind given the fact that a lot of our current leaders are educated abroad?


  11. We made the point above about a robust governance framework required. This will address enforcement and risk etc. What must overlay this framework is good leadership -quality people.

    One cannot help but conclude after a cursory evaluation of the various actors that there is a paucity of intellect at play here.


  12. @ Dompey

    First we must clearly identify a national component within the education syste
    system . Starting at the primary level, civic leadership must be an integral
    part of the national component. Within this national component there
    should also be early exposure to our historical struggle and overcoming
    obstacles etc. As we build on a progressive national component, we
    would improve the quality of citizen who understands the importance
    of genuine service and not one based solely on personal opportunism.
    Hence we will see a new national consciousness and leadership emerge
    We will then accept that independence is more than an anthem and a flag
    and education is more than diplomas or certificates. We must use a new approach
    approach to education to steer us from the maladies with which we are
    now so obviously afflicted.


  13. We must continue to be advocates for a robust governance system to hold private and public sector players accountable.

    Successive governments have padded the public sector to feed popularity and this runs counter to national interest. Therein lies the problem.


  14. Thanks Skinner, I hear yah it sounds like a plan!

  15. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Vincent Haynes October 25, 2016 at 8:31 AM #
    “Is Hyatt approved?”

    Yes!

    There was never a smidgen of doubt about that. Why do you think Donville had the temerity to confirm that weeks ago?

    If Cahill could have been approved by the same set of players why not the Hyatt Priapus.

    The next question is where will this money be coming from?

    Let us see those bold investors step up to the plate and put their monies were their ‘erectile’ mouths are.


  16. Vincent

    Bold investors? What investors?

  17. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    Due Diligence @ 10:31 A. M.

    Do you mean to say this will be another project suffering with the Implementation Deficit Syndrome?

    Are you sure that these announcements are not diversionary?

  18. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    Whichever party wins the election in 2018 has a lot of work to do. I hope the BU party despite all its nom de plume is a party of substance and will begin to name its 18 candidates.

  19. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    @ David at 9:39 A.M.

    We already have a governance system. We need men and women with the testitudinal fortitude to make the system work. All the checks and balances are there. Instead of doing what we are paid to do ,we are looking for someone else to act. We are afraid to take a stand and do what we know to be right. We are all of us afraid of confrontation. And where has all this left us ? Right here where we do not want to be.
    We can change the governance system till the cows come home,we are still left with the talkers and no workers.

  20. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Bernard Codrington. October 25, 2016 at 10:57 AM #
    “Whichever party wins the election in 2018 has a lot of work to do”

    What are you implying here, BC?
    That the ruling party is not currently working effectively?

    So if it is not fit for purpose in 2016 how can it be fit to complete the large amount of work awaiting the country in 2018?

    If you can point us to any thing the present administration has completed satisfactorily or achieved to merit praise we would duly support your contention that it ought to be considered in 2018 for the much more challenging tasks ahead.

    Just name one achievement by the ruling party which fit any of the following criteria of Barbados being:
    (a). Socially balanced;
    (b). Economically viable;
    (c). Environmentally sound.
    (d). Characterized by good governance.


  21. Bernard Codrington. October 25, 2016 at 10:50 AM

    Diversionary? Maybe Delusionary


  22. Due Diligence October 25, 2016 at 10:31 AM #

    A good question……as Miller posited it,he may have the answer.


  23. @Bernard

    An effective governance system is one that works. If the actors in the system have deviated from the script there should triggers to offer corrections even prison.

  24. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    @Miller
    You may infer. I did not imply. I stated. The taxonomy in your final paragraph is not mine but yours so answer them yourself. Any group of men and women who forms the government of Barbados in 2018 has a lot of work to do. It must consist of workers and they must come with a viable and implementable plan that carries this country forward.. And that is self explanatory whether they are Ds, Bs or BUs.

  25. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    @ David12:23 Pm

    You have the biggest trigger sometime before April 2018 . Use it effectively.


  26. Why do I get the feeling from reading some of these posts,that member(s) of the present govt are unhappy with the present path this govt is taking the country….

    I wonder why they do not come public and distance themselves from this path?


  27. Perhaps Commissioner Walkes in Canada might act on this information.Once upon a time Barbados was the first port of call when opportunities arose for foreign employment of nationals.

    http://www.trinidadexpress.com/20161024/news/canada-looking-for-drivers


  28. Wonder what Donville is thinking now that Lowe was forced to come clean on the SSA matter.


  29. Gabriel October 25, 2016 at 12:45 PM

    Are there any “long haul” drivers on the 14 X 21 mile speck in the Caribbean?


  30. Democracy is a facade because if our leaders truly want to address the needs of the people, then both parties must come together and put their best ideas together for the betterment of the nation.


  31. DD
    You must be kidding because they are already several such Bajans doing that work in Canada,the US and UK/Europe.


  32. We are dealing people lives here, and the objective of government ought, must and should be how best to meet needs of the people, irrespective political philosophy or ideology. The two party system has failed to address the needs of the people with level of perpetuity, and yet we continue to put our trust and hopes in a system of governance which bring us back to the same result every four to eight years.


  33. Name how many unfinished tourism projects dot our coastline and ask yourself if this monstrosity in the heart of our city starts and remains unfinished for years to come, how will it impact our World Heritage Site status and the general image of Barbados on the whole.

    I am trying to refrain from commenting on Little Caesar’s instruction to a NationNews photographer that his meeting was a private one and could not be covered by the media. That fool has become drunk with imaginary power. He that is paid by the taxpayer, drives a taxpayer funded car filled with taxpayer provided gasoline on a normal working day paid for out of taxpayer funds, dismisses a photographer because the anointed is on private business? Who the heck died and made you God, you little insignificant imbecile?


  34. Fearplay

    I continue to hear the perennial dictum that those who work for government are paid by the taxpayers? But I haven’t heard any meant of that fact every governmental worker also pay taxes as well. So because someone works for the government that doesn’t mean that his or her right to privacy must be suspended until he/she finds employment elsewhere in the private sector. Fearplay, the same car the governmental worker is driving he/she has to pay taxes to maintain the very car he/she it driving, so what is your point?


  35. Fearplay

    I work for the state government here and continue to hear the same bullshit argument from the general public, as though those who work in government do not have to pay taxes as well.


  36. Dompey

    What does that have to do with the lack of transparency by Government in gagging the media trying to cover a project highly touted by senior Government Ministers as a major tourism breakthrough.


  37. Due Diligence

    You’re right… what does the use of taxpayers money to do with the lack of governmental transparency? (Nothing at all!) My issue with Fairplay isn’t centered around the lack thereof of governmental transparency, but with the use of government cars etc by government workers.


  38. @Dompey, thank you for responding so positively to my post. I trust that your Canadian Prime Minister can pick up himself and traipse off to a development project that requires his approval and then order the media away because he declares it a “private” meeting. Doesn’t work so in a First World country, does it?

    Dompey, I don’t know what your political persuasion is nor do I care. If you are one of the party faithfuls selected for a free trip home for the 50th Anniversary Celebrations, good for you. In your haste to defend, you have ignored the fact that cars driven by government workers are not the same as the car driven by the newly appointed Supreme Ruler of Barbados. No my friend, he who believes that he can lord it over us all is driven around in a Mercedes paid for by taxpayers and maintained by the taxpayer, a vehicle which he could never have afforded on his meagre pittance as a second class attorney before ascending to the throne. Soooo, what’s YOUR point?


  39. @ DD
    Bushie is currently assessing the theory that Dompey compiles a series of blog comments – (which takes some time since he needs to research some ‘big words etc to sound impressive).

    He then arbitrarily copies and paste one of these whenever his fancy is tickled – or perhaps when he actually has more than three completed – to the next available comment and BUP!!
    …we are assaulted….
    How else can the irrelevance of so many of the Domps’ posts be explained…?

    What do you say Domps?
    …is Bushie on the right track or wuh…?


  40. DOMPEY

    TRY YOUR BEST JOIN IN THE DISCUSSION, YOU NEVER KNOW HOW EXPRESSING YOUR VIEW MAY MAKE A DIFFERENCE.


  41. Fearplay

    My political persuasion ought not be the focus of this discussion, but your short memory sir, because do you remember prior to Barrow regaining power back in 1984 or 85, he made a promise to the people of Barbados that he was going to get rid of the top of the line Mercedes St.John and the BLP drove at the expense of taxpayers of Barbados. And Mr. Barrow followed through with his campaign promised and did just that, and I have the utmost respect for Mr.Barrow though he not amongst us..


  42. @DD
    In Ontario, long haul drivers have to complete a one month course and pass a driving test using the tractor trailer in rush hour traffic to be licensed. They just cant come up here and drive like that.


  43. @Bushie

    Leave Domps alone, we welcome ALL, the dullards, zealots and the intelligent.

    A human quality the BU household has learned to appreciate over the years is tolerance.


  44. Fearplay

    And for your information I live in the states and not Canada her poorer neighbor.


  45. @Dompey – THE BARBADOS PROBLEM: A TRADE UNION SOLUTION? While I appreciate your personal attention to my posts, let you and me not hijack the topic under discussion.


  46. Bush Tea

    You might be able to break the will of the youngster Artax, but not this seasoned veteran and tested soldier. You insults can’t move me bro because I take them all with a grain of salt because I know who I am as a man.


  47. LOL @ David
    You KNOW that Bushie LOVES the Domps too…
    …and even AC… (had to cross two toes there though…)
    Shiite man…. Bushie is still crying sad tears for “Old Onions” ….. wid his bill fish beak.. 🙂


  48. @ Dompey
    ….but not this seasoned veteran and tested soldier.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Get over the ‘soldier’ thing Dompey.
    You were a cook’s assistant.
    What they called in the US army- a KUC Specialist class 1 (Kitchen Utensil Care Specialist)

    …in other words – a pot washer
    ha ha ha
    LOL

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