Grenville Phillips II, Leader of Solutions Barbados

Last week, we described how our secondary school students could graduate with some measure of independence.  This can be achieved by keeping our students interested in learning by teaching them the practical aspects of subjects during the first three years, and then training them to start and grow successful businesses using this practical knowledge.

Our students can be taught the more theoretical information during years 4 and 5 in preparation for their CXC examinations.  However, what will we do for those who have already graduated with no marketable skills?

Solutions Barbados’ plan is to train all persons, including recent graduates, to start and grow profitable businesses, with no or very little start-up funds.

The training workshop takes five (5) weeks and it will be transmitted on CBC television and on the Internet, where it can also be accessed with a smart phone.  At the end of the 5-week workshop, all participants should have started a viable business.

Once persons have a sustainable business and wish to expand, a Solutions Barbados administration will provide micro-loans from a new national bank, which will be managed at all post offices.  Such loans will not be available to start a business, only to grow a profitable business.

It is common for our youth to leave secondary school in search of entry-level jobs.  Such jobs include washing dishes, mixing concrete, carrying construction materials around a site, and security guard duties.  Nothing is wrong with these types of jobs.  However, our youth must see them as means to an end and not their end.

There is a measurable difference in the attitude of a person who washes dishes to fund his business, and the person who washes dishes for a living.  The one who sees an entry-level job as a temporary stepping-stone may work hard to complete his tasks.  The one who has resigned himself to the realization that the entry-level job is permanent, may pace himself for a life-sentence of boredom.

Barbados needs all persons to participate in our economy at their highest potential.  Therefore, all persons in entry-level jobs should have a plan for advancing in the company or starting their own businesses.  The 5-week workshop is designed to also train those in entry-level jobs to grow out of them.

Despite all the training, our youth can still be frustrated when they try to access government services that are critical to their advancement.  That is why all government departments are to be managed to the highest international customer-focused standard, ISO 9001.

Our youth can also be held back because they do not know a political operative or are not in favour with the political party n Government.  Our youth should not have to prostitute themselves just to access services to which they are entitled.  In a Solutions Barbados administration, any public worker who delays, denies or approves an application for politically partisan reasons, or attempts to solicit a bribe or sexual favours for government services, will be fired and lose their pension.

Our youth will eventually replace us.  Therefore, they must understand our foundations, appreciate our struggles, acknowledge the threats to our country, accept their responsibilities, and embrace the discipline that is required to lead others.

In preparation for their leadership roles, they must accept the challenge to find honest income-generating work, responsibly grow out of entry-level jobs, ethically start and grow their business, and responsibly advocate for improvements that benefit all of us in Barbadians.  Our students and recent graduates will enjoy developing in a Solutions Barbados administration, and we, their parents, will be relieved when they do.

Grenville Phillips II is a Chartered Structural Engineer and the founder of Solutions Barbados.  He can be reached at NextParty246@gmail.com

66 responses to “The Grenville Phillips Column – Liberating Our Youth”


  1. @Dee Word

    What are the key resources required by a research university?

  2. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Rhetorical I presume David…But I will indulge 😁

    Fellas like the Dr GP or Johns of this world (biases and all) don’t come cheap in the world of academics and business as you know….soooo, to have very intelligent, motivated people on a team for five – ten years takes much bucks for wages and excellent facilities.

    That we know. So then its about having a great benefactor to finance that and of course a UWI will be hard pressed to score such a donor if a major UK or US or Euro college is willing to link their brand name school with his name….the David King Tech Center at Harvard boost your ego much more that the same at Mona, not so!😊

    But jokes aside, we can have key research centers too. Resources are an issue but determination, will and strategic focus are as vitally important.


  3. dpd
    please kindly note that a great deal of research in Medicine has been and continues to be done at both Mona and in Bim ………and with very little money or resources


  4. @Dee Word

    The point is our universities do not have access to the resources to be best in class as research centres with the ‘mass’ to make a difference.


  5. Actually David despite not having great resources to be best in class as research centres UWI HAS INDEED MADE A DIFFERENCE…….AND THE RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH HAS BENEFITED THE ISLANDS FROM AS EARLY AS THE 50’S. iN FACT SOME OF THE INFO REVEALED BY SUCH RESEARCH IS TO BE FOUND IN LEADING TEXT BOOKS OF PATHOLOGY FOR EXAMPLE.

    WHEREAS THIS INFO MAY NOT BE PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE IT IS CERTAINLY REVEALED AT CONFERENCES THROUGHOUT THE REGION AND BEYOND

  6. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Ok Mr Blogmaster let’s agree to disagree on that 12:23 point.

    If Dr GP was not the cantankerous wag 🤣 that he is and was he totally arrogant and business ruthless like say an Elon Musk its very reasonable to imagine that this originator of Health Care Services could have fine tuned a best in class process which he and his partners then implemented via their consultancy practice to others worldwide.

    My point simply is that great research does not need mass for discovery and origination…lots of grand things were created in garages or in limited resource settings ….Graham Bell colleague Lewis Latimer bulb discoveries; or the man Elijah McCoy…real Macoy fame spring to mind

    I get your thrust but I counter simply that size or money really is not a crippling deterrent to excellent research which can lead to great disscoveries…..unless of course you are working to develop something like the grand Collider and such!


  7. In another place, Solutions Barbados came out against reducing the voting age to 16, apparently on the ground of puberty.
    This biological factor (remember eugenics) means that 16 year olds would not be able to cast a reasonable vote. Remember the vote at 18 was introduced by Barrow in 1963, nearly 55 years ago.
    Apart from the fact that our educational system has improved since then (or has it?), it says a lot about any party hoping to contest a general election.
    In today’s Evening Standard, the following letter from Lord Lexden, the Cambridge historian and author of The Governing Passion:
    “Legislation to give votes to 16-year-olds will not run in to any problems in the House of Lords. Labour and the Liberal Democrats, who have a majority in the second chamber, will speed its passage enthusiastically.
    “If they had their way, the voting age would have been lowered for the EU referendum. An amendment to include 16-year-olds passed the Lords but was overturned in the House of Commons.
    “It is obviously unsatisfactory to have a lower voting age for the Scottish Parliament (with the Welsh Assembly expected to follow suit) and a higher one for Westminster.
    “Indeed, maybe 16 should become the new age of majority for everything – including bung cigarettes, jury service and fighting on the frontline, which currently start at 18. Can different rights at different ages be justified any longer?”

    When I say Barbados is on the decline this is an example of an issue that we led the UK on and have now found ourselves in a state talking about bogus biological reasons why young people should not get the vote.
    The House of Lords have some of the most celebrated biological scientists in the world, including Nobel Prize winners. Arrogance, based on a one-dimensional education, can hinder progress.
    We want the vote at 16, half our parliamentary seats (Senate and House) be held by women and cancelling all criminal convictions for adolescents at age 18, giving them a clean slate.


  8. I SAY ONCE MORE

    despite not having great resources to be best in class as research centres UWI HAS INDEED MADE A DIFFERENCE…….AND THE RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH HAS BENEFITED THE ISLANDS FROM AS EARLY AS THE 50’S. iN FACT SOME OF THE INFO REVEALED BY SUCH RESEARCH IS TO BE FOUND IN LEADING TEXT BOOKS OF PATHOLOGY FOR EXAMPLE.

    WHEREAS THIS INFO MAY NOT BE PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE IT IS CERTAINLY REVEALED AT CONFERENCES THROUGHOUT THE REGION AND BEYOND IN THE APPROPRIATE FORA

    GP WAS A CLINICIAN AND A TEACHER NOT A RESEARCHER OR MEDICAL ENTREPENEUR

    GP IS SATISFIED WITH THE LITTLE HE WAS ALLOWED TO CONTRIBUTE

    THE NURSES AND DOCTORS I HAVE TAUGHT AND INSPIRED ARE DOING A GOOD JOB…..FOR THIS I AM THANKFUL AND PRAISE GOD

  9. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Hal, what exactly does the vote at 16 allow other than another cohort of people to be browbeaten with BS.

    This is a continued down ward slide to metooism which you otherwise ridicule.

    The doc’s point of poorly written essays is a touch point into this issue….one assumes the students he deals with are considered above average intelligence as they are aiming be doctors or otherwise employed in medical services. Yet he speaks of a lack of attention to detail, poor logical progression etc etc….. Yet you perceive that going further down the age scale to seek voters will offer some great benefit to the young voters or to society.

    I don’t share your conviction. Let the youth get involved in all and sundry activities around civics, their community and local interaction and be ‘seasoned’ at 18 to cast that vote.

    I see no particular upside to them voting at 16!


  10. de pedantic Dribbler February 19, 2018 at 1:11 PM #

    Then we should stop the illiterate from voting, the elderly, those suffering from dementia and the mentally ill.

  11. Theophilius Gazerts Snr, Avatar
    Theophilius Gazerts Snr,

    Unable to precis the various expositions and reduce them to a level that I can comprehend. Consequently, I will desist from reading the numerous contributions on these matters.

  12. Theophilius Gazerts Snr, Avatar
    Theophilius Gazerts Snr,

    Have you all ever studied the footwork of the blogmaster?
    The way he dances through the numerous pitfalls and landmines as they appear on the BU space?
    How he administers or withholds a spanking from an errant blogger.
    Footwork that reminds one of Muhammad Ali.

    The man has the patience of Job and the wisdom of Solomon.

  13. Theophilius Gazerts Snr, Avatar
    Theophilius Gazerts Snr,

    This might be good place for this…

    “Gov’t explores new system to track and boost tourist spend.”

    Can someone explain to me the benefits of a new system to track tourist spend and how this ssystem will boost tourist spend. I read the article but don’t have a clue about what will or will not be done … just words


  14. Miller: I have offered numerous times. That is all I can do.


  15. de pedantic Dribbler February 19, 2018 at 1:11 PM #

    Voting goes right to the heart of our liberal democracy. Sixteen is the school leaving age, the age when young men and women can enter the work force (and be taxed). Do you believe in taxation without representation?
    Further, teenagers are the future, they should (must) have a say in how the nation is governed and the best way of doing so is not through volunteering, but through the ballot box.
    If we are going to give value to the idiotic idea that they are still going through puberty and therefore are incapable of reason, a new form of eugenics, then we could also cancel the right to vote to many older people.
    We must expand our democracy; if the 16 and 17 year olds at Parkland can take on Trump over the mad gunman, then they are capable of voting.


  16. @Grenville,

    I am still waiting on your response to the question in my earlier post

    Bajeabroad February 16, 2018 at 8:14 PM #

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    I would leave it there for now GB but I challenge you to tell me why this somewhat simple FUNNEL would not unleash our young talent, create employment, support tourism, give some young people hope for the future and provide some additional FX.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    If you want my vote, please offer us real, credible solutions to the problems Barbados faces not sound bites and ill-suited programs like ISO 9000. I will remind you that I am a trained Engineer who has worked in an ISO 9001:2000 registered manufacturing company for 5 years so I know the pitfalls of that quality assurance program. One glaring problem which would explain why it would fail in the Barbados Civil Service context is that is does not address the underlying product or service being produced. It is quite possible to become ISO 9001 certified to make cement filled life-vests. Not a practical product and will fail if used but ISO does not look at the product or service function. ONLY that you have properly documented your process for making the cement filled life jackets and you have records clearly indicating that your staff is trained and is following the procedure to fill all life vest with cement as you have stipulated. So if the underlying process produces a poor product, ISO will not change this.

    Awaiting a great debate on real, credible SOLUTIONS for BARBADOS….pun intended

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