As a consulting Engineer, I always provide my clients with my best professional advice, which they have options of accepting or rejecting.  Unless it is an imminent safety concern, I try not to get emotionally involved in any advice that I give.

There are real consequences to providing sub-standard engineering advice.  For example, it can be fatal to the persons occupying the engineered structures.  Also, Engineers are personally liable for any quantifiable damage that results from people following their advice, whether they are paying Clients or the non-paying public.  It is principally for these reasons why most professionals tend to limit their advice to their paying clients.

We were told that we had to enter a time of severe austerity, and we were invited to make sacrifices for the good of the nation.  However, to my knowledge, no one received an invitation.  The Government sent home public workers without notification, defaulted on loans to foreign creditors without negotiation, and confiscated money owed to pensioners and investors while passing a law to make the confiscation legal.

We are being told by the media to give the BLP administration a chance, since desperate times call for desperate measures.  However, no one is: calling for early elections or organising a march – all of which occurred under the last DLP administration.  Everyone seems to be trying to play their part and adjust their lives to the demanded sacrifices.  But something seems wrong, and we should be free to express our feelings without persecution.

We were led to believe that the Government had to confiscate part of our pensions and retirement savings, and send home public workers, because the Government had no money.  If that is true, then what are they using to pay the 5% increase in salaries that they gave themselves and public workers?  What are they using to pay the salaries of their advisors and supporters who sit on ineffective Boards and in the Senate?  Bitcoins?  No.  They are being paid real money, our money – sacrificially taken.

During this period of severe austerity, serving on a board should be a volunteer position.  The same for the Senate.  Past politicians receiving their lucrative life-time pensions should not be paid for their advice, when there are so many senior public workers who can provide the same or better advice.  How can a person spend 30 years in the public service and still be deemed not good enough to offer competent advice?

I have been offering my best advice freely to the public for the past 2 decades, under both political administrations.  I have sat on advisory committees and it was all volunteer, both as a member, vice chairman and chairman.  There was never any expectation of being paid, not even a stipend, but we gave our best advice.  I still sit on a technical committee in the current administration, and there is no expectation of being paid.  When did we start selectively paying advisors?

Let me clarify that if someone is not working, then I have no concerns about such persons receiving a stipend.  But it is unconscionable for salaried persons, or past-politicians receiving their lucrative pensions, to be paid our confiscated pensions and retirement savings in exchange for their advice, while they demand that others share in the sacrifice.  Why don’t they also share during these desperate times?

If salaried senators, board-members and advisors were unpaid, then would they still serve?  If the answer is yes, then stop paying them the money taken from our pensions, and the salaries saved from laying-off public workers, immediately.  They should be ashamed to receive that money.  If they are not willing to volunteer to serve as part of their shared sacrifice, then dismiss them and find others with far more integrity.

We were told that almost all Members of Parliament had to work full-time because there was simply too much work to be done, and all hands needed to be on-deck.  We are not naive.  We understand that most of the BLP politicians are new and inexperienced, and expect a full-time salary.  Therefore, by all means, let them work and pay them the normal salary.

However, since they are demanding a full day’s pay after passing laws to take part of my pension and retirement savings to pay themselves and their friends, then at least give me a full day’s work.

Why are MP’s, who are being paid a full-time salary to work for us, doing work for their private clients on our time?  Why are they not ‘on-deck’?  Now, if there side-work was not harming us, then they could do whatever they wished with our time.  However, it is our pensions and our retirement savings that they have confiscated, so they better get back to work and start performing.

If their excuse is that our work does not demand all of their time during normal working hours, then give me back my money.  If they want to keep it, then they should at least pretend to be working and stop reminding us that our confiscated money is being wasted.

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

66 responses to “The Grenville Phillips Column – Get Back to Work”


  1. Artax

    Resign on what basis?

    David
    Arthur Holder is a Cabinet member? Is your argument not based on principle?


  2. @enuff

    You are an intelligent person, of the MPs two positions separate from the pack I.e. the frontbench and that of the Speaker. Even if from a positional perspective his renumeration and responsibility do not compare to a frontbencher his is a very visible role given the aura of transparency and impartiality that is expected from the Chair. It is not a right or wrong discussion, it is about Mia using change management approaches by pulling on levers that will resonate with the people.


  3. David
    Or is it about us interpreting everything through sinister lens? What is the role of the Speaker and how does it differ from the Deputy Speaker or Chair of Committees? Should all MPs and Senators be barred from private work? Like I said previously, I am ambivalent as I do see how and why some would have a problem with it but I am totally convinced. You haven’t answered if Caswell should be allowed to run a trades union while being an Opposition Senator or we only see “gain” (imagined or real) when it is Bitt Inc and Rawdon? lol


  4. @enuff

    Not following your reasoning, how is the role of an Opposition Senator comparably to Speaker apppointed from elected members?


  5. My problem is the old retired politicians who are already receiving pensions way above the average person’s salary. They should indeed be prepared to sacrifice as well as the general population and offer whatever advice they have that is soooo significant FOR FREE. They cannot convince ME of their genuine concern for Barbados until they do this. And Mia cannot convince me that this is business unusual.

    As for Kay, I too was surprised by her submission in the Senate. I am hoping that she is better at her area of responsibility. I am not yet prepared to give up on that hope.


  6. @Donna

    Agree with you here about Senator Kay. Hope you are not looking to find the solutions to our problems solely in th political realm?


  7. I have faith in Kay, hope she doesn’t disappoint.


  8. Barbados Tourism getting a boost from Canada. Early start to cold weather . Looking to escape. lol

    https://toronto.citynews.ca/2018/11/16/slippery-sloppy-commute-after-heavy-snow-in-toronto-overnight/


  9. David

    I am just seeing the issue of principle and appearance within the context of Parliament rather than just the Cabinet and Speaker.

    On Senator McConney, I get the impression that she will be successful. The areas she is working on can’t be delivered in 6 months, remember not even the PM’s office had internet? You don’t just turn up and move a government to a paperless operation. Weren’t we busy on BU recently cussing the government for facilitating Mmoney? I would really like to know the educational background/professional experience of the BU talkers. I have a lot of respect for Georgie Porgie (when he talks about medicine and science), Dr.Lucas, Walter (when he stays away from politicising matters), Peter Lawrence Thompson and a few others. But then there are the cut and paste artists, tin foil hat wearers, obfuscators, Salemites and blowhards.


  10. @enuff

    You point is understood but the average Joe Citizen does not equate a Senator with an elected MP. It is the mind and culture of a people we are working to change are we not?

  11. NorthernObserver Avatar

    When somebody offers themselves to the electorate, it should be understood that IF ELECTED, whether they are from the party forming the government or a member of the opposition, they will BE PAID to represent those who elected them. Their JOB then becomes to represent those who elected them. It is a FULL TIME job. The PAY scale and benefits, expect full time participation. If this doesn’t suit any person, they should not offer themselves.
    This idea of elected persons maintaining another parallel career during their elected term is wrong.
    The Senate is not an elected body, nor is their remuneration commensurate with full time employment.
    While it has become commonplace for elected persons in the opposition ranks to frequently continue their careers, this does not make it right. Nor does it matter if one is a “back bencher”. ALL are elected to represent their constituents.


  12. David,

    On Christ the solid rock I stand. This is not because of any white man’s brainwashing but because I have tasted and seen what the Lord can do. He has rescued me from the miry clay and set my feet on the rock to stay.

    My hope is built on nothing less……


  13. Northern Observer

    What are MPs paid?

  14. NorthernObserver Avatar

    I have no idea.
    I ‘believe’ the LoO and Speaker get +/- $Bds130,000 plus allowances and expenses. So I will ‘guess’ a Minister gets $130+, and an elected MP would get less.
    Are you attempting to explain why nearly (?) every sitting MP is a Minister?

  15. NorthernObserver Avatar

    Since you know….what are the pensions and how long does it take to be fully vested?


  16. Northern
    I know because I read the recent Resolution on the parliament website.

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