Press Release issued by leader of Solutions Barbados, Grenville Phillips II

There is a refreshing amount of transparency with the current administration.  Unfortunately, it seems to be used as part of a public relations campaign rather than to improve public policies.  The passage of the Data Protection Bill last week is a recent example.

The national organizations representing: doctors, lawyers, bankers, and digital businesses, submitted their concerns to the Joint Select Committee of the House and Senate (the Committee).  Their concerns generally affected their members.  The Committee responded by dismissing almost all of their concerns.  Their response has been shameless silence.

Solutions Barbados’ concerns focused on issues that could harm the public.  A review of the Committee’s minutes revealed the interesting ways the Committee used to dismiss our concerns.  Our recommendations, and the Committee’s responses, follow.

Interpretation:  We identified several grammatical errors.  The Committee responded: “typos happen and they will be fixed in the final Bill.”  After reading the passed Bill, grammatical errors were still easily found.  For example, on page 15, “unit other authority” should read “unit or other authority”, and “by the any enactment” should read “by the enactment”.

Section 10.3:  Any individual can ask the data controller to amend or erase their data.  For a data controller with reasonable doubts about the person’s identity, Section 21.14 states “the data controller MAY request the provision of additional information necessary to confirm the identity of the data subject.” (Section 21.14)

To address imposters, we recommended that the optional “may”, should be replaced with the non-optional “shall” or “must”.  The Committee’s response: “My understanding is that this provision was put here to give the controller flexibility in terms of confirming identity”.  The only flexibility it gives is for the data controller to behave badly.  They passed the bill with this harmful vulnerability in place.

Section 22:  This section made it an offense to transfer personal information, to countries that did not respect human rights with an “adequate” level of “appropriate safeguards”.  Section 23 tried to define “adequate”, and Section 24 tried to define “appropriate safeguards”.

We recommended that a Schedule containing an approved list of countries, or a negative list of countries, should be part of the legislation.  The Committee stated: “It is suggesting that we try to define adequate, and appropriate safeguards as it relates to section 22”.  We were suggesting no such thing.

The Committee dismissed the idea of a list, because they did not want to keep amending the Bill every time the list was amended.  They evidently did not understand that a Schedule can be amended by the Minister at any time, without having to go to parliament to amend the main legislation.

Section 55.4:  This Section gives the penalty for operating as data processor, without being registered, as “a fine of $10 000 or to a term of imprisonment of 2 months or to both.”  The Profession, Trade and Business Registration act states a penalty of $500, and no imprisonment, for this type of offence.

We were concerned about the discrepancy in penalties for the same offense.  The Committee ignored our concern and responded: “It just makes that null and void because they are not creating professions, therefore, that one is not relevant.”  So much for sober second thought.

Sections 68 & 69
:  We were concerned about the requirement to hire a Data Privacy Officer, whose allegiance appears to be to the Government appointed political Commissioner.  The Committee ignored the close relationship between the Data Privacy Officer and the political Commissioner, and simply dismissed this concern.  Amazing.

Section 73.1:  We were concerned about a glaring loophole that allowed confidential information to be leaked.  This section states: “The Commissioner and a public officer … shall keep secret all confidential information … EXCEPT insofar as the Commissioner authorises that person to release the information.”

The Committee’s legal resource stated: “this particular provision is very common when you are dealing with functionaries”.  So, they left the glaring loophole, for political mischief, in place.

Section 74:  This section allowed the Commissioner and their staff not to be held liable for their mistakes or negligence.  We recommended that the standard for negligence should be the same for all professionals.

The Committee went back to their go-to loophole-retaining statement: “this is a common provision again that is put in place in terms of functionaries”.  Well, that explains why all Barbados legislation to address political corruption seems to have loopholes.

Section 85.2(d):  This section allows the police to: “inspect and seize any documents or other material found on the premises”.  We recommended that the business owner should be allowed to make copies of documents seized, especially if the material seized is unrelated to the charge, and was needed to continue their business.

The Committee seemed to think that businesses run by magic.  Further, they decided that making copies of seized documents “is not something that we would wish to do at this stage or at any stage.”  Are charged persons not entitled to a copy of the evidence against them?  Since when did that change?  And where is this hostility to businesses coming from?

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

71 responses to “Transparent Incompetence”


  1. @ Ewart Archer

    You are right. We have been here before. On August 7, 2007, Ben Bernanke made a mistake by not cutting interest rates. It led in part to turning a financial crisis (housing) in to an economic typhoon. They will not make that mistake again. The Fed is not the Barbados central bank.


  2. Ewart Archer

    In fact the news is that the cut could be as high as 50 basic points, not 25.

    That in itself is an indication of how dire the circumstances are because 25 is the normally expected.

    But deflationary pressures have not gotten any better. And deepening the short term interest rates cuts and extending the length of time make deflation worse. Deflation is more dangerous than inflation in these circumstances.

    This means the Fed is essentially responding to political pressures, not purely economic conditions.

    Lastly, we suspect that we’re much nearer to these events than most. So unless you’re on the Board we have no reason to trust your judgement. And even if you were, our own judgement would be undeniable we find.


  3. Hal Austin

    Is a Focking idiot.

    This is not 2007 all the environments are different today.

    In any event interest rates were not the primary causal reason for the housing crisis and the event that followed.


  4. EWART

    I agree with you 100%

    Make sure you are protect and make that money where ever the market go up/down!


  5. Tron:

    No one is against a Data Privacy law. The problem is that the Government passed a Bill that does the complete opposite – it guarantees data leaks. As you have confirmed, the aim of the Bill was to access the information held by the private sector for tax evasion purposes. However, once the data is leaked to the political party, it can be abused.

    The Europeans have safeguards to prevent that type of abuse. The BLP/PPfDD took every one of those safeguards out of our Bill. Why Tron? For what possible reason?

    If the Government was actually concerned about privacy, then they could have written a bill that defined personal data, and then stated that sharing or selling a person’s personal data, without their consent, is an offence which entitles a victim to damages. The victim could then quantify their loss of business and/or reputation, and a judge can determine what is valid, and award damages accordingly. Instead, we have a 102-page complicated bill that seems to be designed to confuse the public.

  6. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    I fall squarely on Pacha’s side minus the rhetoric on neo-liberal and war.
    The levers available are few. Savings have exceeded investment in many significant markets. And for some time. Dropping short term rates by even 100 points will not reverse this. The bond market globally is more than double the equity, and at last count 28% of bonds were in the 0%-negative yield.


  7. Recession coming? Yes!

    Before march 2020? NOOO!!

    Who willing to put their money where their mouth is?


  8. @ nextparty246 August 15, 2019 11:27 AM
    “If the Government was actually concerned about privacy, then they could have written a bill that defined personal data, and then stated that sharing or selling a person’s personal data, without their consent, is an offence which entitles a victim to damages. The victim could then quantify their loss of business and/or reputation, and a judge can determine what is valid, and award damages accordingly. Instead, we have a 102-page complicated bill that seems to be designed to confuse the public.”
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Your ‘succinct’ assessment is a constructively fair and balanced critique of this Bill of Abject Confusion.

    A bill riddle with legalistic gobbledegook to confuse even the smartest lawyer and purely designed to create another minefield of controversy to produce unjustified legal fees to feed the financial hunger of a fast-becoming irrelevant fraternity.

    Since this piece of legislation has the obvious potential to affect the ‘ordinary’ man and woman called Joe &Jane Blogs why couldn’t the language be more ‘crystal clear’ to make it user-friendly to a more IT literate population?

    In the final analysis, you GP11, should seek an opinion from a legal expert- like the real professor Jeff Cumberbatch- on the Constitutional integrity on such an invasively pernicious piece of convoluted legislation.


  9. We have laws that were copied almost word for word and not enforced,

    Now we see the creation of laws that are riddled with “errors”. Enforcement of these new laws will cause a great cry of pain. Is this the proverbial slippery slope, where we move from bad to worse?

    It is amazing that at every bite of the apple we seem to get it wrong… some will suffer


  10. Great job Grenville in ventilating this matter in such a thorough manner.

    I am glad that you did not do a hit and run job and instead provided a detailed summary/description of this bad law.

    It is amazing at the number of people who would/are willing to ignore the canary in the mine.

    Keep up the good work.


  11. @ nextparty246 August 15, 2019 11:27 AM

    Minor editorial errors are normal even in great legislative projects. It has always been that way, it will always be that way.

    I am sure that our Honourable Prime Minister has selected great experts for this daunting task and that the judiciary can correct any remaining errors.

    So there is no reason for alarmism.

    Those who trust the government trust democracy.


  12. Will these new laws apply to foreign owned businesses operating in Barbados ?


  13. Tron:

    These are not minor editorial errors, but the most dangerous (to the public) bill ever to have been passed by our parliament since our Independence. You cannot be that uninformed.

    Further, unless there is a change in the trend, the PM does not have any experts to draw from. There is only those most loyal party supporters, who tend to be the least competent. Why? Because they know that they will be appointed to positions, so there is no need for them to attend to their professional competence.

    The evidence is in our poorly drafted Bills, our poorly managed public services, the poorly managed judiciary, and the poorly managed national economy. Barbados deserves a PM that will use all of the resources of our nation, not just the extremely loyal supporters.


  14. Hants:

    It applied to all businesses, local and foreign owned, and local or foreign based, that collects data of Barbadians. They will all have to register. It seems to be a Bill to make everyone guilty. Then the political party can decide who survives. So, businesses will either have to get with the party’s program, or pay their $1.5M fine – which almost every business can easily attract.


  15. TheO:

    I write one article each week. If I am writing during a busy hurricane season, then I may not be in Barbados (I am normally on the first military transport to the devastated country). Internet access is normally very limited. Nevertheless, I try to get the article out, but I normally do not get enough Internet access to monitor or respond to comments. Hence, the necessary ‘hit and run’.


  16. @Grenville,
    It was not meant to be a criticism, but was to be complimentary of your thorough discussion of this important item.

    I can understand a lawyer making grammatical and typographical errors, but would be hesitant to make use of the services of such a lawyer. But an ambiguous/flawed law is frightening.

    I can imagine a person’s surprise at getting caught in an unexpected technicality by such a law, Hopefully , the judge has more ‘ sense’ than the lawmakers.

    It would be interesting to have a comment from Dean Cumberbatch.


  17. Northern O

    Seems like yours is the definitive, critical word!

    And so should it be.

    On the issue of a WW3 scenario as an instrument to destroy then rebuild thus recreating value by wiping out unrepayable debt, permit us to demure at this time thus leaving space to savour a small victory of ideas.

  18. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    I concur with you, hence I cannot be definitive.
    The concept of sovereign debt, loans without collateral, is an aberration. Even the newer lenders, China, understand you lend for a specific project, and if payments cease, they now own that project/asset.
    WW3 wipes out a lot more than debt?


  19. definitive
    [dəˈfinədiv]

    ADJECTIVE
    (of a conclusion or agreement) done or reached decisively and with authority.
    “a definitive diagnosis”
    synonyms:
    conclusive · final · ultimate · decisive · unconditional · unqualified · absolute · [more]
    (of a postage stamp) for general use and typically of standard design, not special or commemorative.
    NOUN
    a definitive postage stamp.
    “low-value British definitives simply have a portrait of the reigning monarch”
    More definitions, origin and translations


  20. Yall can’t blame me for anything…the whole place is on fire, pun intended….yall are the ones came up with that press conference..FB is talking care of yall…

    https://www.facebook.com/jackie.stewart.965/videos/1094675174075354/?t=2

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