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Submitted by David Comissiong, President, Clement Payne Movement
David Comissiong – Citizen Advocate

If it is true that the students of the Alma Parris Memorial Secondary School and their parents were NOT consulted in any way BEFORE Minister Ronald Jones and the Ministry of Education made the decision to close down the Alma Parris Memorial Secondary School and to unilaterally assign the students to a variety of other learning institutions, I would strongly advise the parents to join together in a collective body and to engage the services of an Attorney-at-Law to challenge the decision in the Law Court.

It is totally ridiculous and unacceptable that in 21st Century Barbados a Government Minister and/or a Government Ministry could believe that they are entitled to make a decision that so fundamentally impacts on a class of citizens of the country, and that they are under no obligation to consult those citizens.

Not only is this backward, “stone age” thinking, but it is also in conflict with the LAW of Barbados, and should therefore be rigorously challenged, even if it means having to go to the Law Courts.

The fact of the matter is that under the “Common Law” that operates in Barbados a “public authority” is bound by a duty to act fairly towards those members of the public that it serves, and one component of that Common Law duty to act fairly is the dutyย  to consult .

This Common Law principle was expressed by Lord Wilson in the 2014 English case of “R (on the application of Moseley)ย  vย  London Borough of Haringey” as follows:-

” A public authority’s duty to consult those interested before taking a decision can arise in a variety of ways. Most commonly, as here, the duty is generated by statute. Not infrequently, however, it is generated by the duty cast by the common law upon a public authority to act fairly. The search for the demands of fairness in this context is often illumined by the doctrine of legitimate expectation; such was the source, for example, of its duty to consult the residents ofย  a care home for the elderly before deciding whether to close it in Rย  vย  Devon County Council, ex parte Baker (1995) 1 All ER 73. “

The time has come when Barbadians– particularly working class Barbadians who are so often treated with a contempt that would never be meted out to the wealthy— must no longer put up with this backward, arrogant, and patronizing behaviour on the part of State officials who are not only supposed to be their servants, but who are also supposed to be accountable to them.

I witnessed this type of behaviour before with the manner in which the said Minister Ronald Jones and the senior officials of his Ministry closed down the historic Society Primary school— the oldest primary school in the entire English speaking Caribbean. As with the case of the Alma Parris school, there was no consultation with the parents of the students before the decision to close Society school was made.

The parents of the Society students and old scholars of the school initially did the right thing by coming together to form a Committee to protest the closure of the school, but weย  erred by not taking the matter to Court. Our Committee made the mistake of accepting assurances given to us by Jones — assurances that were never kept !

It is time that somebody sends a very serious message to Jones about his callous and patronizing attitude towards the very people that he is duty-bound to serve!

In fact, it is high time that we make the entire Barbadian political class understand that Barbados must function as a “participatory Democracy”– that Barbados must be a society in which the sovereign power of the people is respected, and in which the people are permitted to exercise their rightful role by being involved in the national decision-making processes. And central to such democratic participatory involvement is CONSULTATION.


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116 responses to “Outrageous Treatment of ALMA PARRIS Students and PARENTS Must be CHALLENGED”


  1. Most Barbadians acknowledge the debt of gratitude owed to Errol Barrow and Tom Adams for their uncanny ability to ‘know the way,to show the way and to go the way’ to quote Dennis Johnson.Similarly Barbados owes a debt of gratitude to DC for doing the same albeit pro bono.History should absolve him and history will show his fearlessness in taking on those who would use the power of state or the power of wealth to have their way.In reference to the Hyatt matter it’s rather significant that the office of the DPP has been removed and replaced by a private team of lawyers.What is the message here?Distrust?Incompetence?Ethics likely.Has it not been abroad that the lead lawyer also represents baloney,never mind the window dressing.


  2. The mere fact that the principal of Alma Parris is the bosom friend (buddy) of Jones tells the whole story. Nothing we say or do will change that and the sleeping mistake will not intervene.
    We lose again. Hey Carson C. Cadogan let’s hear you.

  3. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    The nuisance is at it again.


  4. Some of you who are now going to make comments were not even aware that Alma Parris existed and where it was located.
    Did any of you ever volunteered to go work with these pupils who had learning difficulties?
    In most of the schools they are going to be assigned to, have remedial programs for these types of students. We are not talking about HC,QC and the older secondary schools although there are students in those schools that need remedial work done with them. The difference is that their parents pay a lot of money in one and one lessons.
    Do you know that pupils with very low marks are also assigned to Darrel Jordan, Grantley Adams, St. George Secondary and Parkinson?
    These students will be well taken care of in their new schools.


  5. @curious

    What does your comment have to do with the concerns being expressed about how the Alma Parris school was handled?

    Here is an article published by the Advocate to reinforce concerns.

    https://www.barbadosadvocate.com/news/bstu-gets-meeting


  6. Society Primary,the oldest primary school in the English speaking Caribbean,closed by the DLP.Not a word from Mara Thompson,the sleeping member for the constituency of St John.Not a word from the shortkneecrotch native of St John who is the minister of culture.Not a word from the people of St John.This is one big blind government stumbling from one disaster in education to another.When they are not shutting down schools or renaming them or denying youth a better future by curtailing tertiary education,they are taxing away the source of prosperity of the country.


  7. Gabriel

    Should we expect to see another copy of a million dollar invoice?

    But look how Comissiong’s objection find work for high priced lawyers!!!!! So the Solicitor General is not competent enough to handle a simple case like this? Give me a break! If I were her, I would not have turned over any files and see what would happen.

    Hope they lose and the court awards Comissiong costs!

    What morons!


  8. A lot of questions to be answered on the Society issue.


  9. Note that Hal G is pictured with Neil Weekes the former personal assistant for David Estwick. The fatter calf still has a little lean perhaps?


  10. Prodigal
    As I said it seems to me that the influence or ‘guidance’ from Bay St would have been unethical,so that you would not have seen any strategizing to include Bay St.With that hiccup out of the way I have no doubt that baloney might now be part of the team planning and strategizing for the next court appearance.


  11. Agreed, Gabriel.

    By the way, have you heard whatever happened to the court case re the illegal structure near the Flour Mill plant?


  12. Not a word.It looks like cement is still stored there, next to the flour mill.Who would have authorized such an arrangement did not see the inherent danger of the two substances which uncannily have much the same consistency.


  13. @abajanhowe July 8, 2017 at 6:27 PM “The mere fact that the principal of Alma Parris is the bosom friend (buddy) of Jones”

    You sure ’bout dis?


  14. What if they are not friends at all?


  15. ‘It is totally ridiculous and unacceptable that in 21st Century Barbados a Government Minister and/or a Government Ministry could believe that they are entitled to make a decision that so fundamentally impacts on a class of citizens of the country, and that they are under no obligation to consult those citizens.’

    Dem lucky that Bajans are a docile lot, those words could fuel the search for changes


  16. Does the traditional media have a bigger role to play besides selling ads and promoting bashment?


  17. Why blame the minister of education for his callous disregard of the electorate rights, when he knows he can and has gotten away with it already? We have to blame the Barbadian people who have little or not backbone, and is unwilling to stand up in the face of adversity in an effort to correct the wrong that have been done by the elected officials.Would this have happened in America? Would this have happened in Jamaica? Certainly not! So what makes Barbados and Barbadians anymore different? Barbadians as far as I am concerned, have been conditioned to seek the path of comfort rather than the pathway of social-protest when government attempts to trample upon their rights. But more importantly, we haven’t yet learn the importance of facing these kind of attempts by government with the temerity, audacity, and a hopeful sense of optimism that once we make our voices heard, positive change must follow. We have many examples from history to draw from: the Women Suffrage Movement, the Civil Rights Movement, the Mothers Against the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq etc.


  18. @ Farmerbrown
    Bajans are brass bowls.

    Brass bowls do not stand up for right;
    Brass bowls do not stand against wickedness…
    Brass bowls do not abhor stealing..

    Brass bowls just sit idly by …while interpreting the downpour of piss as showers of blessings…

    Watch the coming Union march and you will grasp the full extent of what Bushie is trying to say…


  19. Well, Bushie, it is up to union members to decide whether or not they are going to stand together with the leadership of the union by joining the march on Tuesday.

    Barbadians it would seem are suffering from the “battered woman” syndrome…………we are taking blows after blows like foolish sheep.

    If the members do not show up for whatever reason, this wicked government will take it that the people love the body blows they are inflicting on them.


  20. David

    We were never convinced that the law courts of Barbados have ever provided any adequate remedies for what are essentially socio-political-economic problems.

    While lawyers, cum politicians or social activists like David Comissiong and others may resort to this english institution to disrupt maladministration, most times these efforts seem to be no different than those which the same administration uses when instituting commissions of inquiry, for example.

    Those maneuvers are often used to bury issues.

    The courts themselves have no particular added virtue when it comes to maladministration, as an internal matter.

    And though Comissiong’s advice or suggestion may very well serve to disrupt, it certainly will not may this government nor the next any more efficient in delivery of services. The involvement of the people in their plans, etc.

    Of course, an issue being given such exposure, just before an election, may have some resonance within the immediate constituency, an ability to shift the balance in the critical St. Michael area.

    Outside of these, we are complaining to the Devil about Satan.


  21. @Pacha

    Agree with you in the context that as a society themore constructive line of defense is for PEOPLE stakeholders to thrash these issues our away from the litigious environment of the Court.


  22. Well said Pacha..

    The very DEFINITION of being called ‘people’ revolves around a certain level of SELF RESPECT and an ethical foundation.
    There is NO WAY to be classified as a ‘person’ and to then so comfortably accept such blatant disrespect, lies, incompetence, and ineptitude as has been perpetrated by the DLP these last nine years….. and indeed by the BLP before them…on Bajans.

    The MOST LOWLY of REAL ‘persons’ would have revolted long ago…

    Only mindless, self deprecating brass bowls have the ABILITY and the self-hatred …to stand for such disrespect and ill-ill-treatment….OVER and OVER and OVER…

    Even Jesus – with all his patience – reached a breaking point when he saw how the money-changers had disrespected the temple…. Moses broke the tablets when he returned to see the people doing shiite.
    …but Bajans, like the energiser bunny… keep going on and on and on….

    ….accepting piss.

  23. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    morning fellas

    “”Parents happy with transfers””

    “”WITH ONE CHAPTER in their childrenโ€™s school lives closed, some parents of former Alma Parris Memorial students are eagerly looking forward to the new school term.

    They expressed this sentiment following another meeting at the Ministry of Educationโ€™s Constitution Road, St Michael headquarters yesterday morning.””

    THIS BLOG AND COMISSIONG ONLY LIKE TO CAUSE CONFUSION IN BIM.

  24. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    Sooner rather than later it will dawn on Comissiong the idiot that Bajans only view him as someone with nuisance value.

  25. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    Comissiong must feel like a real ass.

    He is jumping into everything that does not concern him. In an effort to simply cause confusion and mayhem in our country.

    We all know that his Law practice is not doing very well but this is not the way to go about seeking to garner new customers for his business.


  26. โ€œSooner rather than later it will dawn on Comissiong the idiot that Bajans only view him as someone with nuisance value.โ€

    Or โ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆ.

    โ€œIt (has obviously) dawned on Carson C. Cadogan the idiot that Bajans only view him as someone with nuisance value.โ€

    The important thing to consider is that where, in any of these two comments, one statement is followed by another, the second is not to be regarded as obtained from the first by logical reasoning involving such general axioms as that “if equals are taken from equals the remainders are equal”; the fact being that the two statements are merely different ways of expressing the same relation.

  27. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    ……and the same relation is, Comissiong is a nuisance.

  28. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    The public order act or the Sedition act ought to be used against him.

  29. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    Artax

    Its amusing to see the operatives declare their hand so easily.

    …..if DC was not a threat to them,would they mention him?

    …..if MAM was not a threat to them would they mention her?

    You must be a threat as well because they are always cussing you.

    Old bajan saying….the higher the monkey climb….the more they show their tale.


  30. Comissiong will use every opportunity available in his hostile tirade against govt decisions to destroy the country.
    The man is an intellectual gangster. He among many in this society who is not even fit to be called a barbadian
    How is it that at every nook and cranny Comissiong crawls out with haste and strident attempts to inject poisionous barbs into the minds of barbadians
    Thankfully these parents had the good common sense to recognize a wolf in sheeps clothing.
    People ought to be aware that everytime Comissiong use the courts to fight govt decisions the taxpayers pay the govt cost.
    Commisiong has become an unbearable nuisuance which the courts and people should have recognized by now

  31. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    Vincent

    No wonder you lot are on the opposition benches.

    You have no common sense. Comissiong is not a threat to anyone. The last time he ran for a seat in the House in St. Michael Central he received about 20 votes. MAM as you like to call her is not a threat to anyone but her self. She is the only QC who cant produce her Law certificate or LLB.

    And as far as ARTAX, PLEASE, you are scrapping the bottom of the barrel.

  32. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    Hahahahahaha……………..muh bely

  33. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    Vincent

    The parents and population of Barbados know very well that the Govt. has their best interests at Heart.

  34. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    Do you know what I am looking for within the next 24 hours?

    An article on Barbados Today blaming the Govt. for the upcoming Tropical wave.


  35. โ€œAnd as far as ARTAX, PLEASE, you are scrapping the bottom of the barrel.โ€

    Yes, you are correctโ€ฆโ€ฆ. thanks for reminding meโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆ. Anytime anyone responds to comments posted by you and the other yard-fowl nuisance, they are definitely โ€œscrapping the bottom of the barrel.โ€

    @ Vincent

    I am cuss proofโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆ.. Itโ€™s about time we ignore those two idiots. They do not contribute anything โ€œsubstantially significantโ€ to BU and judging from their recent trends in commenting, they seem to be attempting to destroy this forum.


  36. David @3:03 , the other interpretation says that Mr C should in fact NOT mutter any such!

    Realistically his was a popular action well founded on principle and even the more esoteric ‘due process’, but had not a realistic chance to achieve anything.

    Practically where would have these youth gone if the court intervened with an injunction akin to the finprint debacle, for ex? What was any real upside for those parents?

    We the public were surprised by the ‘sudden closure’ but the BUT and the parents who paid ANY attention at the school over the last few years KNEW closure was imminent. That’s pellucid from the remarks now making the rounds.

    Mr C can feel aggrieved by many things about which we treat him like the lone activist voice against govt shenanigans but this should not be one of them.

  37. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    BTW

    COUNTDOWN TO GENERAL ELECTIONS IN BARBADOS

    is wrong.

    Just saying.


  38. @Dee Word

    It is obvious the decision to close Alma Parris is about money i.e. no money to fund the school. Just like there is no money to pay the waste haulers. Comissiong is not doing anything illegal, cannot say the same for Michael Carrington or the unethical decision by Michael Lashley and Denis Lowe by leasing vehicles from Brathwaite at Transtech. BU notes with interest that Del Mastro appears to have been introduced to Brathwaite to establish the stillborn solar operations. How it it these prospectors all seem to be able to align with pro government operatives?

  39. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ angela Skeete July 11, 2017 at 8:15 AM
    โ€œPeople ought to be aware that everytime Comissiong use the courts to fight govt decisions the taxpayers pay the govt cost.โ€

    Ac, you might just a point there!

    The Hyatt litigation would result only in making a multi-millionaire out of Hal the galloping god horse.

    Like the BWA windfall (VAT and all) some of that money must end up in the sleeping giant campaign managerโ€™s bank account to boost the DLP war chest for the elections on the horizon.

    Yes siree, angela Skeete the alternative ass to ac, the taxpayers will be loosing on both fronts as their sore nipples are sucked dried by way of consultancy fees and finders fees paid to the Baloney boy scam company and now legal fees directly earmarked for a bosom pal called Hal.

    Poor Commie, he has been tricked at his own game and hoisted with his own litigious petard.

    Smart move by the Sleeping Giant to feather the nest of his lawyer flock and friends.
    Now whose teats are being sucked to the max??


  40. Comissiong is not doing anything illegal

    Not illegal but his actions are costing taxpayers millions of dollars which have to be recouped at a cost to taxpayers
    What business is it of Comissiong to be agitated with such an intensity which undermines peaceful measures at resolving complex issues
    The govt saw a problem at Alma which had deteriorated to a point whereby putting more finances in the school would not have helped
    But No this professor of mischief and bedlum pounced upon this issue as if there was a wrong that govt did to the parents and children
    When is Comissiong going to realize that his actions have been placed under a microscope and most in barbados society does not like what they see


  41. @Barbados Today โ€œI would like the parents to accept the situation that is going on right now, because at least the ministry is trying to help us. If they werenโ€™t trying to help us, . . . my sons are 15 and they could have just left them outside.โ€

    No the government could not just have left the children outside.

    The government is OBLIGED to provide schooling to every student between the age of 5 and 16. So providing for these twins is NOT a favour being done by the government for the parents and their children.


  42. It is time that we in Barbados started having a conversation about fetal alcohol syndrome disorders (FASD). A lot of our men drink heavily and boast about it, and they boast about whom they effed while drunk, a significant number of our women join the men in their heavy drinking. Drunken sperm + drunken egg=frigged-up children.

    All of us need to be a part of this conversation including the rich white Bajans, and the rich white foreigners, including the French and the Brazilians who profit while some of our children’s brains are so damaged that the children cannot even learn how to write their names. They too, that is the rich white merchants, local and foreign, they too will be found in the balance and found wanting.

    Start your reading here:
    https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/fasd/
    Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASDs)


  43. https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/fasd/educators.html
    Information for Educators

    https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/fasd/women.html
    Information for women


  44. But of course all political parties take money and goods from those who traffick in alcohol, including money from the alcohol manufacturers and money and favours form the rum shop keepers.

    Of course the government also taxes alcohol heavily. Tell the government to taxe the alcohol taxes and create policies and programs to prevent fetal alcohol syndrome, and to provide for the children damaged by alcohol.

    But no we prefer to call the children duncy (I looking at you Carson C. Cadogan) and then to punish them further by closing their school and scattering them to the 4 winds with very little planning.


  45. โ€œNot illegal but his actions are costing taxpayers millions of dollars which have to be recouped at a cost to taxpayersโ€ฆโ€ฆ.โ€

    Including the legal fees paid to Freundel Stuartโ€™s mate, Hal Gollop.

  46. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    Simple Simon

    Please go and wipe all the egg off your face.

    Then come back to Barbados Underground and admit that you were wrong, that the decision to close the school down was the right one.


  47. @Carson C. Cadogan July 11, 2017 at 8:09 AM “The public order act or the Sedition act ought to be used against him.”

    For what?

    For acting completely within the Constitution?

    Has being a DLP yardie completely poisoned your mind?


  48. @angela Skeete July 11, 2017 at 8:15 AM “Comissiong will use every opportunity available… against govt decisions to destroy the country.”

    Yes we know that government has made decisions to destroy the country.

    And we are thankful that Commissiong takes the destroyers to court.


  49. @Carson C. Cadogan July 11, 2017 at 8:09 AM “The public order act or the Sedition act ought to be used against him.”

    Carson C. Cadogan July 11, 2017 at 8:20 AM “You have no common sense. Comissiong is not a threat to anyone.”

    Since according to you “Comissiong is not a threat to anyone” can you explain why then you are threatening to “use public order act or the Sedition act against him.”

    Kindly explain it in real, real simple language, so that even a Simple Simon like me can understand.

    Thanks.

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