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Walter Blackman – Actuary and CBC Talk Show host

The 15th actuarial review of the Barbados NIS is special in that the report was written at the end of the first 50 years of the scheme’s existence. This review therefore gives us an opportunity to see to what extent the NIS reflects the negative features and characteristics of the Barbadian society and economy which have emerged since independence.

The single biggest contributor to the downward slide and decline of Barbados, as a nation, is the misallocation of its human resources. From top to bottom, in private and public, we see and feel the deleterious effects of persons holding critical positions who have no basic understanding of what their roles are, and who are far less interested in knowing how to perform them. Whilst no attention is paid to effectively performing the job, every effort is put into extracting the essence and perquisites out of the position on one hand, and using every ounce of power associated with it to achieve personal and, very often, nationally damaging ends, on the other.

Over the last 50 years, some individuals have created a “science” out of leveraging their positions for social, political and economic advancement. This “science” has been carved from a litany of fraudulent practices which have left both the Barbadian government and taxpayer impoverished and bewildered. Today, too many government departments are owed hundreds of millions of dollars by individuals and companies possessing the capacity and willingness to pay. Payment would be forthcoming, if only a minimal amount of pressure were applied to the delinquent offenders. However, no effective pressure is ever applied. What is responsible for this? Corruption?

This urge, on the part of the Barbadian individual, to focus solely on the “sweets and power” of an office or position, and not on its function, has resulted in a plethora of unenlightened, retrogressive minds spending most of the working day trying to identify people who are more qualified, or perceived to be “brighter” or more talented than they are, and then viewing them as threats to be despised, sidelined or destroyed.

Gripped by feelings of insecurity, and conscience-ridden because of their glaring lack of ability, these retrogressive minds then proceed to handpick surrogates who must be just as dull, or duller than they are, so that they can shine. Fifty continuous years of this practice have succeeded in creating a core of mediocrity at the centre of almost everything Barbadian. The corrosive nature of this phenomenon has become so pervasive, that many of our major national institutions, held firmly in its grasp, are now spiraling uncontrollably towards moribundity.

When local talent is not being misallocated and suffocated on the home front, it is being ruthlessly and stupidly sidestepped in favour of utilizing foreign individuals and entities. Some of these foreign individuals and entities, despite having dark and shady backgrounds, have been able to secure multi-million dollar business deals and contracts with successive governments. How can a small country like Barbados, along with its institutions, develop and grow if successive governments continue to discriminate against its citizens and deliberately pursue a policy of enriching aliens? What fuels this glaring propensity to keep Barbadians down by marginalizing and disregarding their talents?

As a country, Barbados is now unable to withstand the slightest scrutiny by independent international agencies. Public administration in our country has become so woeful and pathetic that, according to Morneau Shepell Ltd, the foreign actuarial firm which produced the report, “in 2016, the IMF raised concerns about data inconsistencies and the credibility of some national statistics.” This is a shameful pronouncement on the state of our national collective incompetence.

The NIS is a national institution which affects almost every Barbadian because of the universality of its coverage. To achieve its long-term national objectives, the NIS, during its first 25 years, ought to have been equipped with skilled, well-trained employees who could help conceptualize, map, and automate all of the processes involved in registering and covering workers, collecting premiums, paying benefits and administrative expenses, producing financial statements, and generating credible data for use in actuarial assumptions and demographic projections. Having such a cadre of employees was extremely vital to the long-term viability of the NIS.

The NIS, specifically the part of it that was born as a department of central government, was breastfed from infancy with the milk of backward-thinking civil service attitudes and human resource limitations. Over time, heavy political interference with and influence over the civil service recruitment process, and over the day-to-day functioning and operations of some departments, took its toll and retarded the growth of the institution. Lax management practices and the expected mishandling of contributions made a bad situation even worse.

After 50 years of operation, instead of having an efficient, fully automated system in place, the NIS now finds itself in an embarrassing position where Morneau Shepell Ltd had to alert anyone reading the 15th actuarial report that the preparation of the report was delayed. It is instructive to note the explanation given by the foreign actuarial firm for the report’s delay:

“Data issues delayed the preparation of this report and also affected the quality and reliability of some data that was provided.”

“…some statistical data were incomplete and financial statements unaudited..”

“The delayed preparation of this report is due to administrative system issues which affected the collection of timely and accurate demographic and financial data.”

The foreign actuaries went on to hint to Barbadians and policymakers that “….these data issues may influence specific rates and years when key events are projected to occur…”

The anguish and heartbreak resulting from this unhealthy state of affairs will be felt by only a few Barbadians. This is so because the bulk of the population has no idea of the amount of money which has been spent by NIS on computer hardware systems and software packages. Tales have been told by NIS “insiders” about money “flowing like a burst pipe” into the hands foreign consultants and retailers for the purchase and setting up of computer systems and associated software packages. Despite the outlay of massive sums of money, which have contributed to the depletion of our foreign reserves, the NIS has not been able to produce a seamless automated system to ensure that credible elements of data are produced, and that benefits are paid in an accurate and timely manner. As a first step toward transparency, Barbadian taxpayers need to demand that an official enquiry be made into the amount of money spent by the NIS on computer hardware and software since 1980. The analysis should show who the payees are, and how much was expended in foreign currency. In this area, something appears to be rotten in the state of Denmark.

There is one slight detail in the report which many readers would tend to overlook. According to Morneau Shepell, outstanding NIS contributions at December 31, 2014 totaled $224 million. However, at a press conference held in early September 2017, Mr. Ian Carrington, Director of NIS, announced that the current amount of arrears owed to the scheme was $650 million (cf Loop News, September 2, 2017). So, is it possible that in less than three years, outstanding contributions to the NIS had increased by $426 million? This seems highly unlikely.

The $650 million figure becomes slightly more palatable after one studies page 9 of the actuarial report, which lists, in part, the amount of un-invested assets at December 31, 2014:

Contributions receivable 223.7 million

Accounts receivable 220.3 million

This approach suggests that “total receivables” of $444 million at December 31, 2014 grew to $650 million at August 31, 2017. This represents an increase of almost 50% over the period, and serves to highlight a situation that is downright unsatisfactory. This clear evidence of incompetence and general refusal on the part of civil servants to collect revenue for government explains why taxpayers’ disposable income is dwindling at such an alarming rate.

If nothing else, the 15th actuarial report shows that there is an urgent need to reform the NIS. The institution needs to be extricated from the grips of the civil service and its associated political influence. It should be established as an independent agency with a Board of Directors and staffed appropriately. Instead of having representatives from the Barbados Workers’ Union (BWU) and the National Union of Public Workers (NUPW), it should have one representative from the Congress of Trade Unions & Staff Associations of Barbados (CTUSAB). In addition to the Barbados Employers’ Confederation (BEC), representatives from the Barbados Private Sector Association (BPSA), the Barbados Chamber of Commerce & Industry (BCCI), the Small Business Association (SBA), the Barbados Association of Medical Practitioners (BAMP), the Credit Union League (CUL), the Central Bank, the Bar Association, the Ministry of Labour, and the Ministry of Finance should constitute the Board.

The investment committee of the NIS should be made up of competent professionals with a proven track record in the areas of finance and investments. The ultimate decision-making power over the investment of NIS funds should reside with the Board, acting upon the recommendations of the newly constituted investment committee, rather than in the office of the Minister of Finance.

Annual actuarial valuations of the NIS should be carried out by Barbadian firms, or an in-house Barbadian actuary, with the aim of preserving scarce foreign exchange and developing Barbadian actuarial expertise.


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109 responses to “Walter Blackman Comments on the 15th Actuarial Review of the NIS of Barbados – Misallocation of Human Resources”


  1. Walter

    I was going along mostly agreeing with you until you produced the following piece of crap:

    The NIS, specifically the part of it that was born as a department of central government, was breastfed from infancy with the milk of backward-thinking civil service attitudes and human resource limitations. Over time, heavy political interference with and influence over the civil service recruitment process, and over the day-to-day functioning and operations of some departments, took its toll and retarded the growth of the institution. Lax management practices and the expected mishandling of contributions made a bad situation even worse.

    Please be more specific. Who were these people that breastfed NIS with the milk of backward-thinking Civil Service attitudes? And what were these human resource limitations?

    You speak out of turn without knowing any specifics and basically slandered the hardworking people who built NIS. The problems with NIS came after know-it-all’s like you decided to fix NIS without understanding what they were doing. They came and installed graduates in every field to work in and manage NIS but the field that was sorely lacking was knowledge of the voluminous NIS regulations.

    Then your ilk brought in outsiders and paid them millions to key in the information on ledgers to the malfunctioning computer system, rather than use existing staff that knew and understood NIS. As a result, hundreds of NIS pensioners are receiving smaller pensions because of incomplete computer records. So much for the private sector forward thinking.

    What is so bad about the Civil Service managers who nourished the scheme in the early days. It was more efficient before the NIS board started to illegally employ staff calling the positions board posts. When the old and barely qualified persons managed the scheme it was more efficient and respected in and out of Barbados. When I worked there in the 1980s, workers from national insurance schemes from outside this country came here to learn from our model. I was personally involved in the training of workers from St. Lucia and Grenada.

    Stick to what you know and from what you have written, it is certainly not anything about the management of NIS


  2. This litany of woe

    Did Barbados begin just 50 years ago? Can the mental clock of this writer go no further back than 50 years ago? Could it be possible that other exogenous forces informed the last 50 years? And if so, what kind of mental limitations does this artificial or arbitrary point of departure suggests?

    Is this the best that one who sees himself as a brainiac, in trying to deflect from DLP failures, could do is to curse workers?

    How come he never cursed himself? We have never been able to discern any difference between the writer and those to whom his bile is well misdirected.

    And be Jesus Christ, his colleagues in government are far worse than he assumes the civil servants to be.

    There are known criminals in this DLP government. This PM, Freundel Jerome Stuart, is presiding over a criminal enterprise of a government, and ignorance is no excuse any more.

    Is the writer not showing his own mental limitations by pointing to a singular source of causation for the failings at the NIS?

    In the first part the writer, as tough with an ax to grind, lambasted the workers. Not once did he, directly, call out this pernicious DLP government for 10 years of mismanagement at the NIS.

    Not once did he complain about the use of the NIS as a piggy bank by government and the private sector for the construction of all types of white elephants and to buy useless paper issued by this administration.

    In all, we have no choice but to give this ‘unfinished product’ of an 11-Plus school boy a failing grade.

    We are not rassssssoul re-reading so you are free to, in your usual manner, to point out errors made.


  3. Caswell Franklyn November 24, 2017 at 10:26 PM #
    “Walter
    When I worked there in the 1980s, workers from national insurance schemes from outside this country came here to learn from our model. I was personally involved in the training of workers from St. Lucia and Grenada.”

    Caswell,
    I would bet my last dollar that you worked at the NIS at the level of clerical officer or senior clerk. No higher. I would also bet my last dollar that, to the best of your ability, you imparted whatever little knowledge you gained from working at the department to the workers from St. Lucia and Grenada who you “trained”.
    However, an orderly working at a recently opened small hospital is not expected to understand the need to plan for the future work of surgeons, anaesthetists, dietitians etc, He cannot foresee the need to mitigate possible future risks through the eventual purchase of malpractice and liability insurance. He just doesn’t have the training and vision.
    You remind me of a man who was feeding a lion cub with milk every day and felt that that was all the expertise needed to keep things under control forever.


  4. Caswell Franklyn November 24, 2017 at 10:26 PM #
    “Walter,
    You speak out of turn without knowing any specifics……..
    The problems with NIS came after know-it-all’s like you decided to fix NIS,,,,,,
    Then your ilk brought in outsiders and paid them millions,,,,,,,,.”

    Caswell,
    You have been heard.


  5. Pachamama November 25, 2017 at 12:28 AM #

    “Is this the best that one who sees himself as a brainiac, in trying to deflect from DLP failures, could do is to curse workers?

    There are known criminals in this DLP government. This PM, Freundel Jerome Stuart, is presiding over a criminal enterprise of a government, and ignorance is no excuse any more.

    Not once did he, directly, call out this pernicious DLP government for 10 years of mismanagement at the NIS.

    In all, we have no choice but to give this ‘unfinished product’ of an 11-Plus school boy a failing grade.”

    Pachamamum,
    Steupse.

    There is one thing I want you to keep in your schizophrenic mind always: I never advised you to fail the 11+ exam.


  6. This is a political puff piece on a serious subject. The anti union bias is clear. The anti labor follow up is equally clear. What is also clear is the inference that blue collar equals ignorant. Given the very poor quality of some of the recent statements attributed to the “lettered” and “qualified” about investing policy by the board in the print media, this writer must explain how the unions and labor are responsible for bad policy which will be corrected by diminishing their input and giving increased decision making power to persons whose investment and management ability are already called into question by this writer in this same article. Why must unions and labor be punished whilst the other board members get a pass. it may be the case that if more blue collar (meaning productive) persons were involved in making decisions, the fund would be more responsive to the realities of the working people who have contributed over their working lives. But I guess in the eyes of this writer, they are of less importance than high sounding rhetoric.


  7. Walter sounds like he looking fuh wuk. lol


  8. Walter are we hearing you to say that the blame for an inefficient NIS should be more pointed at Director Carrington and others on his team? Have to admit was a little disappointed you did not critique the analysis in the actuarial review. You stayed high level because…?


  9. enuff November 25, 2017 at 6:59 AM #
    “Walter sounds like he looking fuh wuk. lol”

    enuff,
    Maybe you should do the same. lol.


  10. David @7.59 AM

    I agree with you on the lack of critique of the analysis in the actuarial review.

    I am also baffled by the seeming suggestion that neither Wynter Crawford or the two Walcotts knew what they were doing with the setting up of this then innovative scheme which in turn led to mismanagement by the civil service……interesting.


  11. David November 25, 2017 at 7:59 AM #
    “Walter are we hearing you to say that the blame for an inefficient NIS should be more pointed at Director Carrington and others on his team? ”

    David,
    This is what you heard me say, clearly and unequivocally:

    “The NIS, specifically the part of it that was born as a DEPARTMENT OF CENTRAL GOVERNMENT, was breastfed FROM INFANCY with the milk of backward-thinking civil service attitudes and human resource limitations. OVER TIME, HEAVY POLITICAL INTERFERENCE WITH AND INFLUENCE OVER the civil service recruitment process, and over the day-to-day functioning and operations of some departments, took its toll and retarded the growth of the institution. LAX MANAGEMENT PRACTICES and the expected mishandling of contributions made a bad situation even worse.”

    Director Carrington and others on his team do not have the power to hire NIS staff. They have to work with employees drawn from the general civil service pool. However, Mr. Carrington and all of the directors that went before him must take collective responsibility for some of the problems which have continued to plague the institution.

    Similarly, the Stuart administration and all of the administrations that went before it, must take collective responsibility for some of the problems that have continued to plague Barbados.


  12. We have never been subjected to reading such innate nastiness

    And would prefer the man-in-the-street approaches, even real cussing

    This article gave us visions of a ‘nasty hand’ woman dispensing of the content of a ‘topsy’ over the palling, on somebody else’s property.

    Is this the level of mentalities a so-called education system has produced, oh Jesus Christ!

    A man who was publicly shamed by Don Blackman for his idiocy

    A man who was abused by Charles Herbert at BMLAS

    A mad man who has always believed that he somehow is better than most, an elitist bull-shitter

    Certainly, there is a deep schizophrenia here!

    Such a man can only now curse an entire class of people who paid for his mis-education.

    But he has not a word of criticism for the elites who have led the masses astray

    Its the leaders, and he had interest once in leading, who are always to be blamed when catastrophe comes.

  13. Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim.

    So, in essence, what Walter Blackman is saying, is that we are the dog who chased cars (independence) it’s entire life until he finally caught one and realised he couldn’t drive.

    The only solution any bureaucrat has for any problem is more bureaucracy.

    Our gov’t and snivel service heaps tons of useless bureaucracy upon us and themselves, then complain when they can’t get through it, then blame us for complaining about it.

    This country needs a massive dose of laxative to flush the bureaucratic shit from our gov’t and snivel service bowels.

    If we don’t find a way to engage practical problem solvers within the civil service (work placement exchanges with the Private Sector) and gov’t (de-politicised Senate) this country is going no-where.


  14. David November 25, 2017 at 7:59 AM #
    “Have to admit was a little disappointed you did not critique the analysis in the actuarial review. You stayed high level because…?”

    David,
    Many of our national problems are created because there is no vision, or when there is one, it is not effectively communicated.

    Here is the vision I have regarding my articles to be written on the 15th actuarial review of the NIS:
    1. Comments on the 15th actuarial review of the NIS of Barbados – Misallocation of human resources
    2. Comments on the 15th actuarial review of the NIS of Barbados – A failed investment policy
    3. Comments on the 15th actuarial review of the NIS of Barbados – Threats to the sustainability of the scheme

    I pray that the Lord grants me the wisdom and the strength to complete the next two articles.


  15. Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim. November 25, 2017 at 9:33 AM #
    “So, in essence, what Walter Blackman is saying, is that we are the dog who chased cars (independence) it’s entire life until he finally caught one and realised he couldn’t drive.”

    Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim,
    Which paragraph(s) in my article did I use to say this?


  16. BMcDonald November 25, 2017 at 6:13 AM #
    “Why must unions and labor be punished whilst the other board members get a pass.”

    BMcDonald,
    My suggestions or recommendations are not to be viewed as decrees or epistles handed down from on high. They are intended to stimulate discussion. Any suggestions you have are just as worthy of consideration as mine.
    For example, if you believe that the Barbados Secondary Teachers Union (BSTU), the Barbados Union of Teachers (BUT), Unity Workers Union, and the Clement Payne Trade Union should all be invited to sit on the NIS Board, I have no problem with that.

  17. Theophilius Gazerts Avatar
    Theophilius Gazerts

    Still a Walter Blackman fan.
    I might be able to get by on a vegetarian diet and wait for different courses, but they are some red meat men/women here. and they expect to be fed nothing less.


  18. Here is the Coles/Cliff notes version of Walter’s critique distilled into a few words “square pegs in round holes”


  19. Pachamama November 25, 2017 at 9:23 AM #
    “We have never been subjected to reading such innate nastiness”

    Pachamamum,
    Your glaring inability to spell simple words has long convinced me that you and the voices in your head have not been subjected to much reading anyhow.

    There are many readers of BU who visit the site to be enlightened and educated. They make no comments.

    I am going to deliberately use you to give these readers a deeper insight into the nature of the human resource misallocation problem plaguing the NIS.

    At page 5 of the 15th actuarial review, Morneau Shepell lists the following recommendations:

    Add SKILLED and EXPERIENCED persons in operational, IT, and accounting areas so that IMMEDIATE IMPROVEMENTS can be made to ALL operational functions, preparing ACCURATE AND TIMELY financial statements and being able to produce RELIABLE reports on the funds’ operations.
    Make MAXIMUM use of the capabilities of the IT system so that service levels may be improved.
    Ensure that all KEY positions within the NIS office are filled.

    The capitalized emphasis is my doing.

    Please read, reflect, and ruminate.


  20. Once more we are leading ourselves into the massa’s trap that our public servants are the poorest on the planet. I would advise that you all visit other countries and see how our public service matches up. Barbados would have been long in the shark’s guts , if we did not have a extremely competent public service. The collective skullduggery of the duolopy has done more damage to the psyche of our public servants than anything else.
    Donville Innis has not left any of the kool aid served by the private sector for anybody else to drink. All the fancy talk Owen Arthur had he left the public service just as he found it, mainly failure to integrate modern technology into its day to day fucntions. It is basically intellectually honest to blame the DLP without equally blaming the BLP. They are both responsible for dropping the ball since the mid seventies. All that has happened is the simple fact that the failures are more glaring now but they have been there almost forty years. The NIS is just another tragedy of the collective mismanagement of the BLPDLP.


  21. Theophilius Gazerts November 25, 2017 at 10:34 AM #
    “…. they are some red meat men/women here. and they expect to be fed nothing less.”

    Theophilius Gazerts,
    A simple, but brilliant observation.


  22. @Walter

    Thanks, we have been receiving some backdoor feedback that the Director and a few of his support staff is a big part of the problem at the NIS.


  23. Walter

    You stated:

    Director Carrington and others on his team do not have the power to hire NIS staff. They have to work with employees drawn from the general civil service pool. However, Mr. Carrington and all of the directors that went before him must take collective responsibility for some of the problems which have continued to plague the institution.

    You state a fact and then draw conclusions that are not supported by the statements you make.

    There is no high turnover of staff at NIS. A majority has been in that department for more than 10 years. The problems did not come from what you perceive, it is more complex than your one-tracked actuarial mind would allow you contemplate and understand.

    The NIS has its own substantial body of laws that are now mostly observed in the breach because the newer highly qualified management are generally unaware of those rules.

    NIS had a staff that was well versed in its regulations but instead of promoting the knowledgeable ones, the qualifications were changed to exclude them. In came a whole host of people with degrees, most of which had no relevance to NIS, and the destruction started. People like Tony Thomas, who had more knowledge of Barbados NIS than any other person alive on this planet, was not promoted to a position where his knowledge and skills would have benefited BARBADOS because he did not have a degree.

    Then junior staff realising that the only hope for promotion was to become a graduate and they went to Cave Hill, studied whatever was easy and returned to be promoted. After promotion, they still have no knowledge of NIS but they manage and do so badly.

    How can you blame NIS staff when they initiate proceedings against delinquent employers but because of political interference the judgements are not enforced. Just take a look at the NIS judgment book at the Registration Department and you would see hundreds of millions of dollars of judgements that are not being enforced. The staff of the NIS are not responsible for that.

    If I were you I would ask David to take down this post since you spoilt it venturing into areas where you had only a smattering of knowledge.

    You should remember that NIS contract a German firm to install a computer system, they in turn subcontracted a Colombian firm to do the actual work. That $9 million contract ended up costing in excess of $66 million and had to be abandoned and the process started over again. How can you blame the staff. These decisions were made over their heads by the political operatives that were appointed to the board.

    We now have a situation where long term staff members can produce more work manually that the new computer system.

    Speak to what you know!

    Sent from my iPad


  24. @Caswell

    A quick intervention.

    Did the unionist who sit on the NIS Board react to the squandermania in any material way that you are aware?


  25. I pray that the Lord grants me the wisdom and the strength to complete the next two articles.

    Walter

    If the next two articles would be of the same quality as the first – don’t bother.

    Sent from my iPad


  26. @Caswell

    By way of a general comment you should note that learning in this forum is gleaned not just from the substantive post but from the interactions that follow.


  27. William

    I must strongly disagree with you. Owen Arthur did not leave the Public Service just as he found it. That would have been preferred, instead he continued the destruction that was started by the Rt. Excellent Errol Barrow.

    Sent from my iPad


  28. At that time one of the unionists that sat on the board was Dennis Clarke, he did not have the capacity to react sensible.

    Sent from my iPad


  29. William Skinner November 25, 2017 at 10:56 AM #
    “The collective skullduggery of the duolopy has done more damage to the psyche of our public servants than anything else.
    All the fancy talk Owen Arthur had he left the public service just as he found it, mainly failure to integrate modern technology into its day to day fucntions….. All that has happened is the simple fact that the failures are more glaring now but they have been there almost forty years. The NIS is just another tragedy of the collective mismanagement of the BLPDLP

    William Skinner,
    I agree with your comments above. Public service reform has been needed for a long time, but all we got was political tomfoolery. Too many civil servants have been foisted upon government ministries and departments. Many of these political picks, rather than focusing on making effective use of the opportunity and developing a skill set, tend to foolishly declare that : “Minister X sent me, so none o’ wunna can’ touch me or tell me nuttun.” They then proceed to cause infectious mischief and mayhem in the department, which in turn lead to poor morale and reduced productivity.
    On the other hand, we have some technologically savvy young people, who are not given a chance, but who have the ability to bring e-commerce platforms to government and by doing so increase productivity and reduce waiting times. The NIS, as a department of central government, cannot escape the effects of this plague.


  30. @Caswell

    What about the others?


  31. @Caswell

    It would be useful for the discussion if your listed 2 or 3 ways that Arthur continued the destruction?


  32. David

    Just one way would suffice – the Public Service Act.

    Sent from my iPad


  33. @ Walter Blackman
    “On the other hand, we have some technologically savvy young people, who are not given a chance, but who have the ability to bring e-commerce platforms to government and by doing so increase productivity and reduce waiting times. The NIS, as a department of central government, cannot escape the effects of this plague.”

    The only young people that the BLPDLP really interested in are those who can use their technological savvy to set up giant music platforms at election time. I know that there are young people building programs and so on but they are almost completely ignored. We continue to waste innovation and creativity by promoting a decadent BLPDLP political culture.

    @ Caswell Franklyn November 25, 2017 at 11:21 AM #
    William

    “I must strongly disagree with you. Owen Arthur did not leave the Public Service just as he found it. That would have been preferred, instead he continued the destruction that was started by the Rt. Excellent Errol Barrow.”

    Thank you. That is why I maintain that both the BLPDLP are guilty and those who continue to prop them up should be taken into the back yard and………

    @ David

    David November 25, 2017 at 11:28 AM #
    @Caswell

    “It would be useful for the discussion if your listed 2 or 3 ways that Arthur continued the destruction?”

    I am starting to believe that you enjoy playing Devil’s advocate because I know you are very intelligent.


  34. Caswell Franklyn November 24, 2017 at 10:26 PM #
    “Walter

    The problems with NIS came after know-it-all’s like you decided to fix NIS without understanding what they were doing. They came and installed graduates in every field to work in and manage NIS but the field that was sorely lacking was knowledge of the voluminous NIS regulations.

    Then your ilk brought in outsiders and paid them millions to key in the information on ledgers to the malfunctioning computer system, rather than use existing staff that knew and understood NIS. As a result, hundreds of NIS pensioners are receiving smaller pensions because of incomplete computer records.”

    Caswell Franklyn November 25, 2017 at 11:06 AM #

    “Walter
    The NIS has its own substantial body of laws that are now mostly observed in the breach because the newer highly qualified management are generally unaware of those rules.

    NIS had a staff that was well versed in its regulations but instead of promoting the knowledgeable ones, the qualifications were changed to exclude them. In came a whole host of people with degrees, most of which had no relevance to NIS, and the destruction started.

    Then junior staff realising that the only hope for promotion was to become a graduate and they went to Cave Hill, studied whatever was easy and returned to be promoted. After promotion, they still have no knowledge of NIS but they manage and do so badly.”

    Caswell,
    After you have recovered from the sting which was inflicted by the big bumble bee in your bonnet, you will realize that your writings reflect one of the central themes of my article – misallocation of human resources.

  35. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Seems like the NIS needs an upgrade and people who are actually capable of making intelligent decisions and not hired and placed in these positions just because they got an alphabet soup of letters trailing behind their names or are friends with ministers…….particularly as it pertains to investment of pensioners funds……and especially government using the fund as a piggy bank because they themselves are not too intelligent and cannot think beyond their one egg in the basket tourism..


  36. Walter

    My writings do not reflect one of the central themes of your article, rather it debunks your misconceptions about Public Officers.


  37. Paragraph 11 of my article states, inter alia, that: Barbadian taxpayers need to demand that an official enquiry be made into the amount of money spent by the NIS on computer hardware and software since 1980. The analysis should show who the payees are, and how much was expended in foreign currency. In this area, something appears to be rotten in the state of Denmark.

    Caswell Franklyn November 25, 2017 at 11:06 AM #
    “Walter

    If I were you I would ask David to take down this post since you spoilt it venturing into areas where you had only a smattering of knowledge.

    You should remember that NIS contract a German firm to install a computer system, they in turn subcontracted a Colombian firm to do the actual work. That $9 million contract ended up costing in excess of $66 million and had to be abandoned and the process started over again. ”

    Caswell,
    You want David to take down my post so that you can put up the same “crap” in its place?


  38. David

    The other trade unionist on the NIS board at the time was Sir Roy. I only know him as a trade unionist and a politician and he was piss poor at both. I know nothing about his contribution at NIS. I could only assume that it was more of the same.

    >

  39. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    “I know that there are young people building programs and so on but they are almost completely ignored. ”

    And that is why the island will continue to suffer for excluding their own talent,…

    …….I know one exhibition scholar who builds programs for world class companies in various industrialized countries, has neen doing so since in university….but would not dare subject themself to the dirty politics that has destroyed everyone and everything on the island….and knows it’s best to stay away.

    The stone you reject is the head corner stone…in this case, there are hundreds of rejected stones that are much better off staying away, not becayse they want to but because of both shitty governments and their useless politics..


  40. No Walter, I don’t want you post taken down so that I could replace it with my crap. I want it taken down and replaced with something that is more worthy of the Walter Blackman that I used to know and respected.

    I am harsh on the people that I like especially when I know that they can do better.


  41. Mr Blogmaster, a debate you say! It more resembles two expert snipers trading high velocity rounds from their positions of strength.

    They both are supremely skilled but reached their levels of excellence by vastly different routes and now are so seemingly hard set that there is no practical middle ground sought or requested…even as they basically extoll the same problems.

    No wonder the NIS and others are plagued by these grave issues …. particularly of effectively using human resources.

    This sniping exemplifies that only too well.


  42. @William

    You are not aware that a good moderator for the sake of constructive discussion will never assume others know what he knows?


  43. @Caswell Franklyn who said: “I am harsh on the people that I like especially when I know that they can do better.”

    Well bro, your bromance with Sir Roy must be like father and son then. 😂

    Your certainly was just a ‘tad’ harsh on a man who appeared to be a magufffy in labor matters here, in Geneva and all bout de place and who also appeared to effect as much political power and control as his storied predecessor did.

    Man, I would certainly not like to see how you treat those you DON’T like.😊

  44. millertheanunnaki Avatar

    @Walter Blackman November 25, 2017 at 10:52 AM
    “I am going to deliberately use you to give these readers a deeper insight into the nature of the human resource misallocation problem plaguing the NIS.
    At page 5 of the 15th actuarial review, Morneau Shepell lists the following recommendations:
    Add SKILLED and EXPERIENCED persons in operational, IT, and accounting areas so that IMMEDIATE IMPROVEMENTS can be made to ALL operational functions, preparing ACCURATE AND TIMELY financial statements and being able to produce RELIABLE reports on the funds’ operations.
    Make MAXIMUM use of the capabilities of the IT system so that service levels may be improved.
    Ensure that all KEY positions within the NIS office are filled.
    The capitalized emphasis is my doing.
    Please read, reflect, and ruminate ”

    Walter, what a big joke!
    So it took a rather costly foreign actuarial consultant to tell the NIS Board the obvious?

    Yet not a word of criticism of the Chair who is doctor in Management Studies.
    Why place a square peg in a round hole if the country has to pay dearly for such straightforward advice which any MBA can offer in a report for less than $50,000?

    If Dr. Worrell can be fired and not missed why not the quack warming the chair?

    Why aren’t you calling for the sacking of Dr. JR who has overseen the massive deterioration of the same NIS?

    Why are you selling yourself so cheap? Don’t you think that you, the NIS specialist, can do a much better job than the quack sitting in the Chair?

    After all, the same sitting duck doc is a boy in the yard compared to you who studied under the guiding hands of Dr Lawrence Nurse and Professor Sakey.


  45. Dribbler

    I am also harsh on those that I have no regard for. He is not my friend nor is he my enemy as far as I know.

    It is just that I hate to see anyone mislead workers, and he has been doing so cleverly for as long as I knew him.

    He was General Secretary of BWU for a long time and people always thought that he was fighting for Transport Board workers but recent events where workers went on strike because of poor representation gives the lie to that. Imagine, there is a 62 year-old provision in the Transport Board Act that speaks to providing pensions for Transport Board, yet to date not one driver has ever received a pension or gratuity from Transport Board even with the illustrious representation from him.

    The consummate bluffer but I digress.

    Sent from my iPad


  46. Caswell Franklyn November 25, 2017 at 11:06 AM #
    “Walter
    How can you blame NIS staff when they initiate proceedings against delinquent employers but because of political interference the judgements are not enforced.”

    Caswell,
    Like most people who visit BU, I do so because I want to broaden my (one-track actuarial) mind through education.

    Section 43 of Cap 47 of the laws of Barbados states:
    (1) All sums due and payable as national insurance contributions under this Act ………may be recovered summarily as a debt due to the board in civil proceedings.
    (2) In the recovery of unpaid sums in pursuance of subsection (1), the Director, National Insurance may certify, in relation to the person who owes those sums, in a certificate called an unpaid national insurance certificate, the sums due and payable by that person.
    (3) An unpaid national insurance certificate may be filed by the Director, National Insurance in the High Court or in a Magistrate’s Court for District ‘A’;………
    (4) ………
    (5) Proceedings may be taken on an unpaid national insurance certificate as if it were a judgment of the court in which it was registered.
    (6) Where an unpaid national insurance certificate is filed by the Director, National insurance in the High Court or in a Magistrate’s Court for District ‘A’, the Director, National Insurance, shall, without delay, deliver a copy of the unpaid national insurance certificate to the person to whom that certificate relates…..
    (7) …………
    43A Where a judgment is obtained in any court against a person in respect of sums due to the Fund, an inspector or other officer authorized in that behalf by special or general directions of the Board may proceed to execute and enforce that judgment…….

    Can you demonstrate to BU readers, and a non-lawyer like me, how political interference can prevent the enforcement of judgment of the court under section 43 of Cap 47?


  47. Do not worry about NIS. It is filled with Mickey Mouse money and will soon implode.

  48. NorthernObserver Avatar

    Condensing as the author did latterly,
    1. Misallocation of human resources…this seems to be consistent through many publicly operated bodies
    2. A failed investment policy….the Review references an IPS or Investment Policy Statement. What is failing is potentially not the policy, but its execution, which as publicly stated by the MoF his department controls. The Chairman is on record stating there is no political interference in the policy itself. So I will conclude the execution and the policy statement do not match due to political interference.
    3. Threats to the sustainability of the scheme….these would stem from 1 & 2.

    The performance (or lack thereof) of IT systems seems to be a common thread through many public operations in Barbados. One after the other, their inability to provide timely and accurate information, is a recurring theme. Yet, they somehow wish the public to believe they have “internal information” which is timely and accurate?

    We all know the NIS has been unable to produce an annual report in eons. Barbados Port Inc has reports for 09,10,11, 12, then they skip in 13 and we get a 14 report and nothing since? Before the BNOCL website went offline, they too were in breach, missing several years of reports.

    How can anybody, make proposals on alternatives, when there is no clue as to what is actually going on?

    And the various Ministers and promoters would like the Investment community to ignore this and adopt a positive attitude? Please….get your various houses in order.


  49. Bushie sees nothing wrong with Walter’s paper.

    ..and Caswell may also be technically correct, but the reality is that he, like Walter, tends to see things from a particular perspective. Walter from a political /actuarial one, and Caswell a ‘rules and regulations’ viewpoint.
    They are both saying the same thing.

    The FRIGHTENING thing though, is that this shiite is endemic THROUGHOUT all areas of local life. Total lack of accountability; spending like it is going out of style; and piss-poor results routinely accepted as normal.

    Since Caswell is wont to severely critique those whom he likes and respects, perhaps he will understand why Bushie thinks that he should do like Vincent on reverse mortgages blog, and shut his trap on this topic.

    NO ONE ELSE in Barbados understands the level of shiite going on in this place like Caswell. He has made it his business over the past 40 years to stick his nose into all kinds of jobby – to the point where he can now identify shiite just by the smell.

    BUT WHAT HAS CASWELL DONE…?
    …besides talk shiite.??

    Bushie put up a proposal some years ago for this SAME Caswell to BUP and – using his vast knowledge, strong commitment to justice, and fearless drive to see fairness – make a DIFFERENCE in Barbados in the coming elections as THE third party.

    Caswell did not even fart on Bushie…

    …now he is cussing Walter.
    At least Walter THINKS that he is on the path to bring change….. even though he is wrong – just like his pal David Thompson found out.
    You CANNOT join the Devil’s team with a long-term plan to take over Hell ..and air-condition it.

    It does NOT work like that….
    The CORRECT approach is to say to the demons – GET THEE BEHIND ME (or in Bajan terms, Kiss my donkey….)

    Now the two of wunna could talk ’til the fat lady starts her song,….. it is too late.
    Wait…
    …is that the song’s opening bars being played as we speak….?

  50. Caswell Franklyn Avatar

    Walter

    It is simple, all the Minister has to do is to tell the director not to enforce the judgment, as been happening for years.

    Since Barrow’s constitutional amendments of 1974, officers who aspire to senior positions in the Public Service, comply with those unlawfully directives if they ever want to be promoted. Since they know the service so well, you should be aware.

    NIS has been going downhill since Grantley Smith was promoted from Director. Layne was bad enough but after him, they promoted Ian Carrington and all hell broke loose. He might have all the accounting qualifications but he could not successfully manage a snow cone cart. He does not listen and thinks he knows it all.

    I recall representing a lady before him, who was accused of receiving her benefit (pension) in duplicate. According to NIS, one was being lodged to her account and a cheque was also mailed to her. She denied that allegation, claiming that she never received the cheques. I asked him to produce the returned cheques, but he couldn’t.

    I then suggested to him that he had at least two crooks in NIS, one cutting the cheques and the other doing the bank reconciliation. He in turn threatened me with a defamation suit.

    As it turned out, I was wrong. There were not two crooks but one crook doing both functions. This is now nine years after and no one knows how much money was stolen and not a single cancelled cheque has been recovered. We know that millions were stolen but no precise figure. Yet Carrington remains. How can you blame the average public officer for NIS failures?

    Sent from my iPad

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