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Walter Blackman - Actuary and Social Commentator
Walter Blackman – Actuary and Social Commentator

In April 2015, I wrote an article captioned “A new agenda for Barbadian workers and their families”. In that article, I made an attempt to highlight the existence of a struggle between two opposing forces – Barbadian workers and their families versus the political class.

Writing from Chicago at the time, I tried to capture as much of the perceived negative features and weaknesses of the political class as I could. I then tried to show how these perceived shortcomings of the political class were negatively affecting the economy, and ultimately making life somewhat difficult and challenging for Barbadian workers and their families.

To be thorough, I also highlighted the perceived weaknesses of two very important decision-makers and members of the political class – the Prime Minister and the Minister of Finance.

Having laid out a historical case against the political class, and having highlighted the fact that some members of this class were extremely vulnerable until February 2016, I dared the unions to start fighting on behalf of all Barbadian workers and their families, and to exploit the temporary vulnerability of the political class. The next strike called, I challenged them, should be a strike on behalf of all Barbadian workers and their families.

Clearly, in April 2015, the cards were heavily stacked in the unions’ favour. Back then, one would have been heavily inclined to support any widespread industrial action brought by the unions aimed at benefiting Barbadian workers and their families.

Nineteen months later, in November 2016, Barbadians can now see the extent to which my article has exposed the unions for their ineffective and, sometimes, pretentious defense of the interests of Barbadian workers and their families.

Since April 2015, at least three special groups of Barbadian public sector workers needing effective union representation have attracted national attention:

1. Some workers 60 years and older being forced into retirement.

2. Persons working in temporary positions for 3 years or more remaining un-appointed.

3. NCC workers being retrenched.

In November 2016, all fair-minded Barbadians can now hold these truths to be self-evident:

1. As a result of the industrial relations process related to the above-mentioned Barbadian workers and their families, the unions emerged weaker and the government emerged stronger.

2. The temporary period of vulnerability for some members of the political class ended in February 2016. Having secured their pensions, these members now feel less personally threatened by union actions, strategies and tactics.

3. No meaningful, sustained, pressurizing industrial action was taken on behalf of Barbadian workers and their families prior to February 2016, or since.

Now that February 2016 has passed, and now that some members of the political class can no longer suffer personal anguish and pain as a result of being rendered ineligible for state pensions, Barbadian workers, their family, and their country must now become sacrificial lambs in order to achieve a short-sighted, individualistic, and perplexing union objective.

Barbadians (local and foreign), their families, and tourists must now suffer from anger, frustration, and fatigue as they try to pass through, or do business at our two ports of entry. The memory of our nation’s 50th anniversary of independence celebrations must now become marred and tainted, and our local tourism industry must now face a risk of reduced revenue, all because of industrial action started by “irresponsible and reckless” unions.

Mind you, whereas the unions could not find it possible to bring pressure to bear on the political class on behalf of all Barbadian workers and their families, they now find it very possible to speedily commence industrial action on behalf of one man. “Hurting many, for the benefit of one” seems to be the new slogan and mantra being adopted by the unions.

By the way, hasn’t a precedent been already set and accepted by the unions for the manner in which the Akanni McDowell case should be handled? Shouldn’t the Personnel Administration Department (PAD) and the NUPW repeatedly meet, if necessary, to negotiate a settlement? If the differences between the goals of the two contending groups prove to be intractable, and all efforts at achieving a settlement fail, shouldn’t the case go to the Employment Rights Tribunal (ERT) which should act as final arbiter? In other words, why should Mr. McDowell be treated differently from the NCC workers?

It is highly likely that the current industrial action and its attendant politics, being pursued on behalf of Mr. McDowell by the unions and the opposition, do not have the support of the majority of Barbadian workers and their families. Consequently, one is now heavily inclined to side with the political class and castigate the unions for attempting to damage the fragile economy of Barbados at a critical time because of narrow, political, singular and individualistic motives.

With respect to effective representation of the rights and benefits of Barbadian workers and their families, the reputation of the unions has wobbled noticeably since April 2015.

The act of effectively representing the interests of many workers and their families, when confronted by the opposing entrenched interests of the powerful few, must be seen as the raison d’être of all unions worldwide. Rather than assume a hostile, confrontational stance against the government and attempt to wreak havoc on a weakened Barbadian economy for one man only, the unions ought to ascertain if there are any major problems that Barbadian workers are beginning to encounter as a result of increasing private sector greed and contempt for our labour regulations in these difficult economic times.

To gain some insights into the new anti-worker practices being embraced and developed by some Barbadian employers, the unions should begin having collaborative discussions with the Ministry of Labour.


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246 responses to “Hurting Many for the Benefit of One – the unions exposed”


  1. @ Walter

    I have previously mentioned in this forum that you are one of my role models and your articles were characteristic of an individual who analyzed an issue before “putting pen to paper.” Unfortunately, however, the more I read your article and associated responses, the more I’m convinced you are writing in consultation with “Douglas Leopold Phillips.”

    Despite having been deemed by the prominent contributors to BU as one who does not know what he is doing, I felt compelled to respond. So, please bear with me as I use my limited intellect in trying to explain.

    According to a news item in the April 1, 2015 edition of the Nation News, Akanni McDowell was elected as President of the NUPW with 593 votes (replacing the retiring Walter Maloney).
    Therefore, you must appreciate that PRIOR to McDowell’s “ascension” on April 1, 2016, the NUPW was lead by the “old guard” of WALTER MALONEY and DENNIS CLARKE.

    It is also interesting you mentioned: “3. NCC workers being retrenched.” Recall after the former NCC employees were RETRENCHED in APRIL 2014 , they made request for representation from the BWU and NUPW, citing the NCC’s management’s refusal to adhere to the “last in, first out” protocol.

    On May 25, 2014, PM Stuart MET with officials from the BWU and NUPW to discuss the NCC issue. Stuart ADMITTED that “BASED on EVIDENCE PROVIDED during that meeting, there appeared to be some “PROCEDURAL MISSTEPS” that must be fixed, but the task of correcting them should not fall on the NCC management,” and “ANNOUNCED PLANS to REFER the NCC impasse to the Employment Rights Tribunal.” [Source: Barbados Today, May 26, 2014).

    The Employees Rights Act [ERA], which became official on April 15, 2013, includes a clearly defined procedure for dealing with the settlement of disputes (e.g. Sections 42 & 43 of the ERA).

    Section 42: Where an employee believes that there is a dispute concerning an infringement of any right conferred on him (her) by this act, he (she) may present a complaint to the Chief Labour Officer.
    Section 42 (2): A complaint may be made under this section by an employee or trade union or another representative group on behalf of the employee.
    Section 42 (3): Where a group of employees, having the same or substantially the same interests, has a complaint, one complaint may be made in a representative capacity.
    Section 43: Where the Chief Labour Officer received a complaint under Section 42, he shall as soon as practicable inquire into the matter and process the complaint for conciliation and referral to the tribunal.

    It was regrettable that, as “seasoned” trade unionists, Maloney and Clarke SAT at the meeting and ALLOWED Stuart to “CIRCUMVENT” the AUTHORITY of the ERA, unions and Chief Labour Officer, and ILLEGALLY refer the matter to the Employee Rights Tribunal [ERT] without due process, as mandated by the ERA.
    Since the ERA became official on April 15, 2013, Maloney and Clarke had adequate time to avail themselves of its contents or could have relied on the NUPW’s lawyers to read and interpret the Act on behalf of the union.

    The ERT encountered a number of delays/challenges before the commencement of hearings. These included members of the Tribunal seeking office space to facilitate hearings and their subsequent resignation; the selection of new members and time to review “CASE: ERT/2014/064 – Cutie Lynch (Acting herein on her own behalf and on the behalf of former employees of the National Conservation Commission as listed) and respondent, National Conservation Commission.”

    It is my understanding that, as stipulated by the ERA, the ERT has a status which it can operate similarly to a commission of enquiry. If this is indeed the case, then the delays were unnecessary. Unfortunately, during the course of the delays and the tribunal hearings, those former NCC employees did not receive salaries/wages, unemployment benefits or severance, “ultimately making life somewhat (more) difficult and challenging for (the former NCC) workers and their families.”

    Fortunately, the Tribunal ruled in favour of the former NCC employees, with “the Employment Rights Tribunal, Chairman Hal Gollop said these workers were made redundant arbitrarily, as the ‘LAST IN FIRST OUT’ principle WAS NOT APPLIED CONSISTENTLY across the board” [Source: Barbados Advocate, July 16, 2016], thereby confirming they were UNFAIRLY DISMISSED during the government’s 2014 retrenchment process.

    Recall Stuart’s comments relative to the “procedural missteps” that must be fixed,” i.e. “THE TASK OF CORRECTING THEM SHOULD NOT FALL ON THE NCC MANAGEMENT.”
    Rather than holding Denis Lowe ACCOUNTABLE for NON-ADHERENCE to the retrenchment protocol, Stuart essentially engaged in “HURTING MANY, FOR THE BENEFIT OF ONE”

    Under the circumstances as outlined above, the union’s protagonists would argue that since the NUPW did not “assume a hostile, confrontational stance against the government and attempt to wreak havoc on a weakened Barbadian economy for (the former NCC and other trenched employees) only,” they acted in the interest of the economy.

    On the other hand, the antagonists will be quick to indicate “With respect to effective representation of the rights and benefits of Barbadian workers and their families, the reputation of the unions has WOBBLED NOTICEABLY (PRIOR to) April 2015.”

    Under the “new dispensation” the NUPW, though some aspects of their approach may be flawed, they are seeking to represent “Barbadian workers and their families,” as evidenced by their stance relative to “Some workers 60 years and older being forced into retirement.”

    However, when compared to the “old dispensation” under Maloney and Clarke, based on the evidence, the retrenched former NCC employees did not receive proper representation when these “tow the party liners” were at the helm of the NUPW. And as such, “Barbadians can now see the extent to which (your) article has exposed the unions for their INEFFECTIVE and, sometimes, PRETENTIOUS defense of the interests of Barbadian workers and their families.”

    Before, the unions chose to “tow DLP’s line” rather than represent their constituents. This is why “Akanni’s case should be different from the NCC workers.”

    Finally, it seems as though if any individual, special interest group or organization is critical of this DLP administration they are deemed to be unpatriotic, pursuing self-interests or not “putting country first.”

    Walter, you have bought into the political rhetoric.

  2. are-we-there-yet Avatar

    Vincent Haynes; You said above;

    …… In the absence of that the unions have no choice but to see this action out to its bitter end,their backs are to the wall. I wish people would understand that this has nothing to do with an individual.

    You are so right! Even Hal Austin cannot see the obvious; whatever the merits or demerits of MacDowall’s placement in the higher position, he was and is the duly elected President of the Union and therefore the union has to fight tooth and nail to remove any whiff of disrespect for the Union and its head, inter alia.

    The action of the Government to revert him at this time was malicious, to say the very least.

  3. are-we-there-yet Avatar

    Artaxerxes;

    Well said!
    Your sage posts are sorely missed. Hope that the one above is an indication that you are back!


  4. Artexeres u can do better than what you stated accusing govt of malicious intent
    Bringing the evidence for your outrageous statement would have been a lot helpful and better than throwing out political propaganda


  5. It is clear McDowall is qualified in accordance with the CEO. If the post was vacant, as is being argued, was it advertised and interviews conducted prior to the appointment of the young lady to the post? If advertised, did McDowall apply? #justasking


  6. Enuff
    for short term acting the position does not gave to be advertised. to permanently fill the vacancy it must.


  7. @enuff

    Mr. Mcdonald is not qualified to act as an Environment Health Office not did he satisfy the requirement for the post of Heath Planner. Please procure a copy of the Qualifications Order before you speak and when you have come back and inform this blog of your findings. The Union has not got a let to sand on. Impressions will not prevail on this occasion. I await your findings/


  8. The action of the Government to revert him at this time was malicious, to say the very least
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    The action of the government is MUCh worse than malicious.
    It is childish, silly, stupid, counter-productive and ill-considered.

    What is MUCH worse however, is to let it fester and affect the whole economy, sour ongoing relationships, and destroy the social partnership.

    Not even Froon can be so stupid….

    Therefore, it can only be that this government is looking for scapegoats to blame for what they MUST know is about to hit the fan …right after the charade of 50th anniversary celebrations.

    It is not hard to visualise Kellman, Pornville and Stinkliar ranting and raving about how the ‘Unions destroyed their well laid plans’ to recover the Barbados economy….. and how great all would have been …BUT FOR this unpatriotic action by the unions…..

    Well they gotta blame SOMEBODY…..
    ..and it ain’t looking like stinking Bushie…. 🙂


  9. ac November 30, 2016 at 2:02 PM #

    “Artexeres u can do better than what you stated accusing govt of malicious intent. Bringing the evidence for your outrageous statement would have been a lot helpful and better than throwing out political propaganda…”

    @ ac

    Perhaps you could indicate to me where in my contribution I accused the “government of malicious intent?”


  10. @AC

    I am recognizing that a lot of people are shooting from the hip and either not researching the issue or are being influenced by other peoples writing.


  11. @Bush Tea

    if the govt were to put all the facts on the table, some body will get punish for misleading the Public Services Commission


  12. @Bush Tea

    Do we understand the implications of what we are saying? Isn’t the PAD suppose to be independent of the executive?


  13. Apples and Oranges are being continously argued to no avail.


  14. @ Realist
    A promise of transparency is what pushed the DLP into government. Putting ‘all the fact’ on the table is often a very good idea when difficult decisions need to be taken.
    Perhaps what YOU will find is that were all the fact put on the table, it will become obvious – even to AC, that the action was malicious and nasty.
    Simple common sense and DECORUM would have called for them to wait six weeks and respect the contract.

    @ Artax
    Welcome back…
    You were missed.

    @ David
    Don’t you get it? …or you just want Bushie to spell it out…?
    All the Public servants with the knowledge, guts, and professionalism to be ‘independent’ have gone home to rid themselves of these jackasses in the DLP.
    All we have left are a pack of ‘yes-please’ / ‘how high do you want me to jump sir?” lackies (not even necessarily DLP), who need to seek permission to piss….

    …and the only shiite that will be different come next election …is that the lackies will be not even necessarily BLP…..


  15. Realist
    My apologies. Do tell BU the quals required and those of other “Health Planners”. Clearly, you have no shame to admit that the government was paying an unqualified Akanni for months?

  16. Retribution-things that make me go hum! Avatar
    Retribution-things that make me go hum!

    Can anyone advise on the outcome of the HR position at NHC? Was this issue resolve? Did the family member received the position?

    As VH said, this has nothing to do with an individual.


  17. ””The action of the government is MUCh worse than malicious.
    It is childish, silly, stupid, counter-productive and ill-considered.
    What is MUCH worse however, is to let it fester and affect the whole economy, sour ongoing relationships, and destroy the social partnership.””

    Bushie

    So no government, even of the worst kind, is to have no power at all. Not even an administrative prerogative to say who is to be appointed in the civil service and to which posts.

    And given the nature of Westminster government, all former Bajan governments have held such power. And, of course, they have previous and routinely, used party political considerations in determining who gets which jobs.

    We are yet to see any measureable benefit, to workers, of this ‘social partnership’, after more than 20 years. Maybe you or David could tell us what these benefits to workers would have been.


  18. @enuff

    I have asked you to undertake a task and then let us discuss. Your interest seems to be so political that you don’t want to engage in an analytical discussion .Facts can be proven and nit discredited.


  19. @ Bush

    when mistakes are realized they should be corrected with haste. U will not get me to go deviate from my point. I am not eloquent with words so I have to stick to basics.


  20. @David

    PAD is a part of the civil Service and consequently the Executive


  21. Excuse me I am outta here the country still standing after fifty years of Independence
    Today i celebrate.
    Adios

  22. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Bush Tea November 30, 2016 at 2:30 PM
    “The action of the government is MUCh worse than malicious.
    It is childish, silly, stupid, counter-productive and ill-considered.
    What is MUCH worse however, is to let it fester and affect the whole economy, sour ongoing relationships, and destroy the social partnership.
    Not even Froon can be so stupid….
    Therefore, it can only be that this government is looking for scapegoats to blame for what they MUST know is about to hit the fan …right after the charade of 50th anniversary celebrations.”

    Bushie your clairvoyance, sometimes, can be so amazing and so intuitively innocent that even you would be surprised to learn that such an early revelation of what is ahead of Bim could be so crystal clear that even the asinine cretins (both lots of ac’s) might just be able to interpret in some form of opaque vision your warning equivalent to that given by the prophet Daniel to King Nebuchadnezzar.

    Why do you think the spirit of EWB already well embodied in Independence Square is being reenacted in a most Satanic fashion by the devilish erection of a monument of madness in servility to the egotism of Fraud Fumble and in memory of the behind-the-scenes man of rearguard action J. Cammie T?

    The year-long Fun and Games party for the ‘Party’ is almost over. And you, Bushie, know what portends from early 2017.

    Jamaica, then Trinidad and Tobago and then Guyana: They all had their Independence in quick succession. And you know what happened when they were all unable to defend their own dollar.
    What makes Barbados any different?

    Froon- a man of ‘indifferent’ aloofness, social insensitivity and downright “don’t-carishness”, to use Bajan parlance- is the right man for the job as foretold by Prophet Bush Tea.

    Amen!


  23. Sitting opposite Frank Walcott was always a learning experience.The ‘heavy roller’ was never short of words and style and spoke in whatever tone he read of the manner in which the ball was being delivered from the other side.Humour and a spot of Latin was always part of his method of disarming those he faced.
    In this fiasco with the NCC Its was always and will always be a matter of LIFO.If the infidel lowdown or the misguided fool neblett brought the archangel to the table,with Frank Walcott,it was always going to be …….’when you are ready to talk serious talk about the future of this NCC,you know my telephone number.Until then,this meeting stands adjourned’

  24. Joe "Bobby" Alleyne Avatar
    Joe “Bobby” Alleyne

    “Barbadians are obsessed with qualifications,” says the Barbados-born emigrant and immigrant Hal Austin, who seems to have a personal obsession with the term “Guyana-born”.

    And why shouldn’t they be? You want someone to run a bit of the government apparatus, what are you going to do? Get the candidates together on the starting line and make them do a 100-yard dash? Maybe choose national-level athletes by making them take an IQ test? What do you think, good idea?

    We are not equal. I’m not even sure it would be a good thing if we were. We do not come out of the womb as blank slates. Mr. Austin, for example, acquired a minimum of 40% of his general intelligence at the moment of his coneption. He gets no credit for that 40%. He gets all credit for the effort he doubtless made to acquire and perfect the other 60%, but that’s not to gainsay the fact that he had a genetic head-start over many of his peers.

    Hereto, though, general intelligence has been more or less randomly scattered across the income distribution, which is why bright boys from the Ivy can end up winning prestigious journalism awards in London.

    What should concern Barbados, therefore, on this wet 50th birthday, is the rate at which its brightest are self-exporting. That necessarily affects the spread of general intelligence across the income distribution, negatively so.

    So yes, Bajans should take an interest in the measured skills (let’s call that “qualifications”) of those selected to run bits of the government.

  25. Caswell Franklyn Avatar

    Pachamama

    You wrote:

    “So no government, even of the worst kind, is to have no power at all. Not even an administrative prerogative to say who is to be appointed in the civil service and to which posts.

    And given the nature of Westminster government, all former Bajan governments have held such power. And, of course, they have previous and routinely, used party political considerations in determining who gets which jobs”.

    I am sorry to have to be the one to tell you that the above is absolutely rubbish.

    Under the system of governance that is practiced in Barbados, politicians have no power to determine who is to be appointed in the Public Service. That is the role of the Governor-General acting on the advice of the Public Service Commission. If you doubt me, please check section 94 of the Constitution. However, since the constitutional amendments of 1974 the PSC is required to consult with the Prime Minister before it advises the GG on the appointment of permanent secretaries, deputy permanent secretaries, heads of department and their deputies.

    Politicians are acting in breach of the Constitution when they intervene to secure the appointment of public officers.

    Please apologise for attempting to mislead BU.

    Sent from my iPad


  26. @realist

    can two persons be paid acting for the said position when one was not in it long enough to enjoy the benefit for someone else to act for him

    stranger things have happened in the Public Service.

    @awty
    Are you suggesting that the PS who obviously was engaged in the various matters related to Mr MacDowall, would have allowed him to be paid at a salary level above that at which he had been reverted?

    of course. Especially considering his term would have ended at “x” date and as such all terms, conditions and salary should be due to him until “x” date.

    @David
    Isn’t the PAD suppose to be independent of the executive?

    Farcical and rhetorical questions typically beg not for an answer.

    @all

    I note that my question hasn’t been answered yet. I suspect the answer to it might render all allegations, innuendo and industrial action to the heap of nullness and voidness,

    Let me put it in blunter terms….. did Akanni McDowall receive the same pay on November 25th that he has received for the past 2-3 months???

    Still observing…

  27. Joe "Bobby" Alleyne Avatar
    Joe “Bobby” Alleyne

    Troo, dat, Cassy. But recall that you are addressing a member of the human race who told an international readership that “[this woman beaten to death in Barbados] is nothing but white thrash [sic].”

    BTW, wunnah wanna BUP?

  28. Joe "Bobby" Alleyne Avatar
    Joe “Bobby” Alleyne

    Wunna Buppin’, Cas? Time’s a-waistin’. Dat Satan fork at de Garrison got Bushie havin’ a psychic episode. De worl’ endin’ nex’ Munday, Caz. De BBE did tell we so.


  29. “I am confident that there are enough intelligent people in the unions and the civil service to resolve this relatively simple matter without resorting to measures aimed at crippling the economy and the country.
    A reasonable onlooker might be wondering what the fuss is all about.”

    A reasonable onlooker would have queried why the authorities would choose to create a fuss at this point in time by making the stupid decision to revert Mr McDowall with only six weeks remaining before the end of his acting appointment.


  30. @observing

    if the gentleman reverted to a lower post how can he be paid in a higher post when someone else was being from the same statutory emolument head?


  31. @realist 9:31

    AS I mentioned earlier, stranger things have happened in the Public Service with the goal of achieving a means to an end.

    My question again is simply this…..

    Did Mr. McDowall receive and accept all associated benefits of the post up until the end date of his temporary appointment, despite being reverted prior to that date.

    I recall BIDC workers accepting severance etc., yet still fighting to retain a position.

    If nothing else at least it seems that the NUPW is consistent.

    Still observing…

  32. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    David

    ”Why create it by revoking the agreement six weeks early?`”

    That statement alone says it all. If you look at this situation, very carefully, one can only conclude that the DLP wanted some sort of provocation. There is no way in this world, Venus or Mars that the DLP did not know that revocation of the NUPW’s government acting job before the contract expired, would have resulted in some form of retaliation. I believe this was a deliberate big foot move, done purposely to shed negativity on whatever action the union makes and to evoke unpopular opinion about the union or any union for that matter of fact, as an organisation of disruption and irrelevancy. The union must stand their ground on the Akanni matter. Wickedness is afoot in all of this.


  33. @observing

    you can answer the question then since you have the facts. If u R so certain that he was paid to the end of the period why is the union striking?

    If I could have influence the govt I would suggest that it find alternate accommodation for the staff occupying it rents from nupw. Further the subvention it hives to the said union be reduced and an audit done on how the money is wasted. In addition, withdraw being aa guarantor for the property etc.

    By the way you have not taken up my offer. I note that people are accusing joyann innis as a supporter of the DLP. which party the General Secretary, the Deputy and the Assistant as well as the Greene Guy support, not the DLP. In Addition to Asikore, Mcdonald and Fabian?


  34. Realist or real idiot?


  35. @ Caswell Franklyn said………………..
    Under the system of governance that is practiced in Barbados, politicians have no power to determine who is to be appointed in the Public Service. That is the role of the Governor-General acting on the advice of the Public Service Commission. If you doubt me, please check section 94 of the Constitution. However, since the constitutional amendments of 1974 the PSC is required to consult with the Prime Minister before it advises the GG on the appointment of permanent secretaries, deputy permanent secretaries, heads of department and their deputies.

    Politicians are acting in breach of the Constitution when they intervene to secure the appointment of public officers.

    Please apologise for attempting to mislead BU……………………..

    =============================================

    No apology is warranted.

    We are well aware of what the regulations state. The pretense that the politicians should have no influence in ‘non-political’ civil service.

    Don’t be naive!

    We also know that in practice, any government Barbados has had, merely pays lip service to those regulation.

    You must apply a more sophisticated analysis. An analysis based on what is actually happening. Not what some arcane, colonial, civil service, rules state.

    And this had been your problem, assuming that everybody, every time, must follow all these regulations.

    Can you not see the real function of these rules, to frustrate the many, to create division, as in divide and rule.

    We have worked in the Barbados civil service, just out of school, and neither that employment nor promotion, which quickly followed, was guided by those rules.

    Caswell stop walking around with all of these meaningless, abc rules, in your head.


  36. @Bush Tea

    r u a musical clown or a circus clown?


  37. @ Realist
    Can’t Bushie be both…?
    LOL
    ha ha ha


  38. Realist
    You were not serious about advising government to be spiteful and vindictive just because a union dared to question an action taken on government’s behalf … were you?
    You done know that Bushie like a lotta sport …. but shiite talk is shiite talk….

  39. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Observing November 30, 2016 at 7:04 PM
    “can two persons be paid acting for the said position when one was not in it long enough to enjoy the benefit for someone else to act for him
    stranger things have happened in the Public Service.”

    What are you trying to tell us here, Observing?

    That this current political administration is prepared to issue directives to the PAD which run contrary to its stated economic policy of not only reducing the fiscal deficit in terms of manpower cost but also against its stated manifesto commitment to good governance characterized by “the principles of participation, consensus, accountability, transparency, responsiveness, effectiveness and efficiency, equity and inclusion, and the rule of law”?

    Why pay two people for doing the same job in the same time period? What kind of fiscal management is that if not one to further the narrow partisan political aims of the presiding party drunk with power and emboldened by a rather ineffectual union terminally split along partisan political lines?

    Why was the contract of the man terminated prior to its agreed effluxion? Was the man so incompetent in the job and for the sake of the reputation of the Ministry and in the interest of the public his services at the level had to be severed before the contract period was up?

    If the man McDowell or what ever his name is unsuited or unqualified for the job why was he hired to the job in the first place? Isn’t that a major mistake by the same PAD who is now judge, jury and executioner of the whole affair?

    To whom does the PAD report? Who is the minister responsible for that Department? Whose career prospects in the Public service have been threatened if certain political demands are not met?

    Where is the transparency and accountability in all of this fiasco concocted primarily by one man’s anger and egotistical greed for vengeance against a ‘boy’ who dared to stand over the sleeping giant called Fumble and pissed all over him while on strike in the SSA yard.

    It would be most interesting if this matter could find its way on the agenda of the ILO for its next meeting. But it must first pass the local goalkeeper the grand ole duke of York who has been most silent on this call to arms for ‘One for all, and All for just One’.


  40. @ Pacha
    Boss, why don’t you leave Bushie’s star boy Caswell alone?
    When he needs cussing ..you can rest assured that Bushie will not hesitate to oblige….

    Caswell’s penchant for the rules and regulations is EXACTLY what this country needs more than ANY OTHER SINGLE THING at this point.
    The rules, while sometimes flawed, generally seek to ensure a level playing field, and to temper the unlimited power of the mighty against the abject weakness of the ordinary citizen.
    THAT IS CALLED JUSTICE AND FAIRNESS.

    If rules are ignored, then all kinds of shiite results….
    …like CAHILL
    …like CLICO
    …like unemployed mothers with $5M bank accounts
    …like ministers driving luxury cars belonging to businessmen
    …like national awards going to persons in whose family children can be shot with no trials

    Caswell is a Boss. ..a God-send for Barbados.
    Even HE does not understand his value, …and when we fail to capitalise on him, we will have NO ONE to blame but ourselves.
    Were we an enlightened nation, we would grab him by the balls and INSTALL him is a position to oversee national governance….. assuring a person with proven BALLS and INTEGRITY is overseeing this vital aspect of national life….
    But we are happy with a (very bright and nice, but) blind lady doing this job….

    You argument that “We also know that in practice, any government Barbados has had, merely pays lip service to those regulation.” is defeatist. It only explains where we find ourselves now…
    Caswell defines what we need to do in order to reverse the decline….

  41. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

  42. @ Mr Bush Tea

    an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, does that sound familiar.

    How much time does the gentleman spends on the job, that also goes for Ms. Redman


  43. Bushie

    Well, we have previously invited a dictatorship, if Caswell was the kind of man, as presented by you. In a desperate attempt to use this historical methodology to force change.

    But we also know enough about management to know that the bureaucratic model, which dominates the civil service, by itself, cannot sustain transformation. Has never been able to. Especially before crises arrive.

    It lacks creativity, ingenuity, is unresponsive to changing circumstances, is expensive and so on. We have found that it takes a critical mixture of all four major management models to achieve stated objectives. In most organizations.

    It is our contention that the bureaucratic model as historically practiced in Barbados is largely responsible for our failures. Failures of the country.

    Would kind of a dictator would want to inforce the rules of a public service central to a country’s failure?

  44. Joe "Bobby" Alleyne Avatar
    Joe “Bobby” Alleyne

    “R u a musical clown or a circus clown?”

    “Can’t Bushie be both?”

    To label Bush Tea as any kind of clown is to disparage the admirable work of pantomime professionals. At least they’re professionals.

    With his wearyingly reiterated comments about “Satan’s pitch fork at the Garrison”, the cultist has reached peak stupidity.


  45. Union Presidents as well as officers have certain privileges…..a simple fact that can be checked with the ILO.


  46. @Vincent

    You are correct of course. We have these idiots whose job is to troll social media to muddy the issue. Union officials are given time off to attend to union business. This is what the union is fighting against.


  47. @David

    People like you should check facts before you speak/ the unions have staff to implement policies arrived at. The convention would not envisage them to be off the job every day. You can check and see how many hours Ms Redman spends at school and why Lodge had to hire an additional teacher to teach her classes. Ask the Parents how often Ms. Redman is around to teach classes. Ascertain from the Ministry of Health whether the Mcdowel guy is at work and how many hours in a week. Emotive language is what it is, facts are measurable.


  48. You have no idea what you are talking about. As president of the BSTU Redman is allowed free periods to do union business.


  49. #David

    I reiterate how much time is she allowed ? Whole days? Check with the school to ascertain how often she is around. Parents are complaining that she often times do not turn up for scheduled classes. Who pays her the Union or the Government? If she has so much work to do why doesn’t the Union ask for leave of absence so that she can fully concentrate on union’s business. In light of the fact that there is such great technology why don’t the union access such technology to facilitate its leaders from having to be away from their work place chasing fires. Who is the President of BWU and is he away from work like the three other union leaders.

    No wonder caswell’s union is growing while the others are contracting and losing membership to him and caswell is a one man’s union. All that glitter is not gold. Ask her employer.


  50. @Vincent

    Educate the readership on them.

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