Nurses defend their strike action against attacks from the government, employers and BLP aligned trade union leaders

Submitted by Tee White

On Wednesday 16 December after a meeting of the Social Partnership which brings together the government, employers and trade unions, Prime Minister Mia Mottley hosted a press conference in which she unleashed a scathing attack on the striking nurses and, in particular, Caswell Franklyn, the opposition senator who is also the leader of the Unity Workers Union (UWU) which represents the striking nurses. Prime Minister Mottley accused the nurses of prematurely initiating strike action without following the accepted procedures and accused their leader of using the strike action to further his own political ambitions. She further denounced the UWU leader for encouraging its members to abandon patients and declared that since the nurses were on strike, the government would dock their pay.

The Prime Minister’s attack on the striking nurses was, not surprisingly, fully supported by the Barbados Private Sector Association but, more surprisingly, also backed by the leaders of various trade unions including the Barbados Association of Medical Practitioners (BAMP), the Barbados Nurses Association (BNA), the National Union of Public Workers (NUPW), the Barbados Workers’ Union (BWU) and the Congress of Trade Unions and Staff Associations of Barbados (CTUSAB). Openly violating the basic principles of working class solidarity, which as leaders of workers’ organisations they are supposed to uphold, these trade union leaders distanced themselves from the striking nurses and made common cause with the government and employers in their attacks on the nurses. The members of these unions will need to hold these leaders to account for their betrayal of basic trade union principles.

In the face of the onslaught from the government and the forces it had mobilised against them, the nurses have held their ground and more nurses are joining them in the strike action in defence of their rights. The trigger for the dispute was a botched attempt by the government to introduce its mandatory Covid 19 vaccination policy under the guise of ‘safe zones’ at the geriatric hospital. The management of this institution put up a notice at work identifying unvaccinated nurses who would have to undergo weekly PCR tests. The UWU had previously made it clear to the management that any attempt to impose the mandatory vaccination policy, without consultation with the union, would be met with strike action. Although the Ministry of Health backed down and stated that the management of the geriatric hospital had acted prematurely since the mandatory vaccination rollout had not yet been approved, this action nevertheless triggered the nurses to take a stand on a number of other issues which had remained unresolved for years. These included better pay, better working conditions, health insurance, continuous training and better nurse to patient ratios. These are issues which the nurses have been raising for years and which successive governments, including the current one, have failed to address. Therefore, any claim that the nurses initiated strike action prematurely is clearly false. In fact, the nurses have put up with unacceptable conditions for too long and it is the government who is in the dock on this issue. Speaking about her lived reality in the Barbados health care system, one nurse declared, “We are standing in solidarity with our colleagues against the authorities trying to implement safe zones without consultation with us. We also have our own grievances at Edgar Cochrane, such as not having enough resources – gloves, blood collection bottles, gauze.

Enough is enough. Imagine having to tell a patient they have to buy their own catheter bag; some of our patients can barely afford the bus fare to get to us”. Another nurse complained that nurse to patient ratios could sometimes reach 1 to 32 patients to nurse per day while the suggested ratio is 1 to 6. Directly addressing the despicable claim by the Prime Minister that the union had encouraged the nurses to abandon their patients, Kathy Ann Holder, a registered nurse of 12 years declared, “The whole entire time, never have we abandoned or left our patients for the last two years, with or without pay, with or without the testing, with or without the vaccine when there was none”. In fact, another nurse made the point that the nurses’ struggle is actually aimed to benefit the patients, when she stated, “We are not only standing up for ourselves, but for the patients too”.

In the face of the just cause of the nurses, the government has initiated extreme measures to suppress their’ struggle. On the 18 December, the UWU claimed that the government had put a freeze on some striking nurses’ bank accounts to prevent them accessing some of their money in addition to not paying them their December salary. Director of Finance, Ian Carrington denounced the claims as “total and complete foolishness and utter rubbish”. However, a recording of a nurse speaking to her bank and asking why a portion of her bank balance was unavailable has been circulating on social media. In the recording, the bank’s customer service representative explains to the nurse that her money has been frozen because the government of Barbados had placed a hold on a portion of the money in her account. In the lead up to the holiday period, the oppressive measures of the government against the nurses must be condemned and they give the lie to the Prime Minister Mia Mottley’s claim that she would not “unfair workers”.

The attack on the striking nurses by the current BLP government reflects the fundamental anti-working class nature of this government and is consistent with its attacks on the hotel workers when they were protesting to get their severance payments. While praising the working class activism of Clement Payne and the martyrs of 1937, the government is hell bent on crushing the struggle of the workers for their rights in 2021. Although they claim that it is the leader of the UWU that is using the nurses’ strike for political ends, they are actually the ones who have called on all the political parties in the country to condemn the nurses.

The cause of the nurses is just and the efforts of the government to suppress them are unjust. All out to support the nurses in their struggle!!

294 responses to “All-out Support for Striking Nurses”


  1. No resolution to nurses’ strike
    THERE HAS BEEN no deal between Government and Unity Workers’ Union to end the more than two-week nurses’ strike.
    General secretary Senator Caswell Franklyn said yesterday no one had not reached out to his union.
    “There has been no official word from Government about anything,” he told the MIDWEEK NATION.
    On Monday, Franklyn said the strike would end once the deal Government proposed that day with the Barbados Nurses’ Association was to the satisfaction of his members. However, he said this did not occur.
    “I do not understand why my union had put forward proposals and then those proposals were discussed with somebody else, but still did not understand my proposals in the first place. For example, it was us who asked for appointments to be confirmed so people can stop paying higher national insurance, but then you hear from the Minister [of Health The Most Honourable Jeffrey Bostic] about 320 appointments.
    “We weren’t asking for those. If appointments are not confirmed, the nurses would continue to pay higher national insurance, some for up to six years. So when those appointments finally come through, national insurance then would only
    pay back for two years,” he said.
    Franklyn charged that all those who were taking Government’s side and chastising him and the striking nurses did not have the best interests of the medical professionals at heart.
    “The strike is on until we get the concessions we have been asking for. The agreement [says] the nurses will get [a pay] increase but it does not say when that will come into effect. All these are issues the other unions will butt up against because they don’t know what they are doing,” he said.
    Attempts to contact Bostic were unsuccessful. (CA)

    Source; Nation


  2. Urgent compromise vital
    BARBADIANS SHOULD WELCOME any sign of progress in resolving the dispute that has led to nurses striking for the past two weeks, since its impact is being felt by hundreds of patients and could go on to affect more people if the impasse continues.
    Addressing the dire issues faced by nurses such as training, lack of appointments and communication is to be lauded, and shows what dialogue can do once people decide to meet within an atmosphere of mutual respect. Such respect and indeed cordiality were the orders of the day when Minister of Health and Wellness The Most Honourable Jeffrey Bostic met with the Barbados Nurses Association on Monday.
    This meeting has seen a heightened response from the Government, unlike up to last weekend when it seemed to be dismissing the strike as the essence of a political ploy in this “silly” pre-General Election season, as stated by the Prime Minister.
    The main target of that approach was Senator Caswell Franklyn, who doubles as leader of one of the nurses’ representatives, Unity Workers’ Union, as well as an Opposition member in the Senate.
    The Prime Minister’s criticism drove home the lesson that politics and workers’ representation can be dangerous bedfellows – ironically. The impasse also saw a registered nurse of 12 years’ standing, Kathyann Holder, come out and declare that nurses were grossly underpaid and disrespected, and emphasising: “Never once have we abandoned [our] patients.”
    So how did we get from the stage of applauding our nurses and likening them to superheroes less than two years ago to where some of them are now being vilified by the action taken over of their long-standing grievances?
    Selfless performance
    The public might well have taken for granted their selfless performance and long hours, which have kept afloat the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, polyclinics, district hospitals and COVID-19 isolation centres.
    However, few would have known of the issues unearthed at Monday’s meeting, including late and sporadic salaries, transportation issues, no change to uniform allowances in 12 years, and working conditions with serious environmental implications due to irregular industrial cleaning.
    Amid all of these issues, great is the pity that some of Barbados’ nurses would have felt their pain to be so acute that they would have had to strike at this time when the Delta variant has been taking a toll on the country while compounding the usual hectic demands on the health service. For while the impasse is ongoing, people are suffering and our vaccination programme is in danger of being derailed.
    A compromise is therefore urgently needed since no one knows what the inevitable arrival of the Omicron variant will bring to our shores or, indeed, what other challenge is around the corner for a country that has faced its share of crises in 2021, crises that have impacted on the health of our citizens.
    For while the impasse is ongoing, people are suffering and our vaccination programme is in danger of being derailed.


    Source: Nation (Editorial)


  3. Resolve nurses’ issues for sake of patients

    IT’S HARD TO BELIEVE that there are only three more days till Christmas.
    What a year it has been, and so many of us, myself included, were just too happy to usher in the Yuletide season and all the merriment and cheery feelings it brings. As we head to
    Christmas Day, there is still somewhat of a bitter taste left in many mouths given the state of affairs in this country.
    Take, for example, the nurses’ situation and the strike action by Unity Workers’ Union which its head, Senator Caswell Franklyn, promised would be ramped up from last Monday.
    The strike hit the vaccination drive. Joint coordinator Dr Elizabeth Ferdinand reported over the weekend that 40 per cent of the COVID-19 vaccination centres had to be closed since the strike began.
    At a time when we are asking more Barbadians to get vaccinated to protect themselves and their loved ones, this is most unfortunate.
    Omicron spike
    The time also could not have been worse when we are reading of the increase of the Omicron variant in both the United States and the United Kingdom. Minister of Health The Most Honourable Jeffrey Bostic said it was just a matter of time before this variant reaches these shores. All this at a time when Barbados is set to welcome visitors for the winter season to help bolster the tourist industry, which has taken a hit from the COVID-19 pandemic.
    The point is, we need more people in this country to be vaccinated, and with the centres affected by the strike, it means we can expect fewer numbers turning out.
    Disappointed
    While I don’t want to get caught up in the back and forth between Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley and Franklyn that has dominated headlines in the media for the past week, I have to admit I was disappointed to hear his comments when he reportedly addressed the relationship of the striking nurses to their patients.
    It was Mottley who brought that issue to light when she described the spearheading of the strike as callous, given the impact it was having on patient care. She said Franklyn told the nurses they were not abandoning the patients as they, the patients, were not theirs if they are not on the job. However, at the press conference last Saturday, while he admitted he did utter such remarks, he added they were taken out of context. He said: “The nurses were on strike and sisters were calling them telling them that they have abandoned their patients, and the nurses came to my meeting crying. So I told them they are not your patients until you take over duty. When you are at home they are not your patients. It was spun in a way to make it sound as if I am uncaring and harsh.”
    I have long admired and respected Franklyn. I know him professionally and personally and have never passed him on the streets. However, that comment rubbed me the wrong way. Truth is, if the words were not said they could not have been taken out of context.
    A nurse’s job, I believe, is never just a job. It is a vocation. It is one that requires compassion, sympathy, care and love for someone on a sick bed whom you do not even know, who is no relation to you. Still, there must be a level of care administered which can sometimes make
    a difference between life and death.
    Social side
    While I understand fighting for your rights and what you think you truly deserve, there must be a human and social side to all of this, especially at this time when the country is facing a global pandemic.
    Some may also say this is indeed the right time to get the attention of those in authority who can make a difference to your situation. I say this is a time to have a heart, and appeal to people’s sense of reason to sit and amicably work out this situation.
    I could feel the emotion reading the words of nurse Kathyann Holder, who spoke at the press conference last Saturday when she described a scenario where at times nurses would pull from their “meagre” salaries to purchase items to assist in the care of their patients. She added that to be accused of abandoning the patients was a bitter pill to swallow.
    Holder said while the Prime Minister accused the nurses of abandoning their patients, in no shape or form had they done that. “We love our patients and provide a service to them 24 hours per day.”
    We hold our nurses to a higher standard because we want to believe that when we place our loved ones in their care, they are getting the best treatment available.
    My Christmas wish is that this issue will be resolved soon because, sadly, it will be the patients who will suffer.

    Source Nation (Editor)


  4. The blogmaster listened to the feedback re: auto-closure of blogs and removed the setting. We will see if commenting is abused, again.


  5. Le us see how many of you making noise will support the cause by digging into your wallets/purses.

    https://barbadostoday.bb/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Nurses-730×456.png

    Nurses open to donations as union leader probes account freezes
    Article by
    Kareem Smith
    Published on
    December 21, 2021

    Scores of striking nurses would welcome donations from “like-minded” citizens as they face severely depleted finances in the leadup to Christmas.

    This, according to General Secretary of the Unity Workers’ Union (UWU), Senator Caswell Franklyn, as he investigates alleged Government interference with the finances of the healthcare workers who have been off the job for the last two weeks.

    However, Minister in the Ministry of Finance, Ryan Straughn has doubled down on statements from Finance Director Ian Carrington, that the Government has no ability to interact with citizens’ private finances.

    Over the weekend, Barbados TODAY received a recording in which a man, apparently a customer service representative of CIBC FirstCaribbean International Bank, informed a nurse that her account had been frozen. He added that a percentage of her salary had been deducted after being uploaded to her account.

    Barbados TODAY understands the hold on the accounts is distinct from the salary cut which Prime Minister Mia Mottley, in accordance with the law, said would be imposed on the striking nurses.

    In the two-minute back-and-forth with the bank worker, the nurse demanded to know why a hold was placed on the balance on her account to the tune of $3,926.01 on December 17, with the expiration of that hold set for December 30.

    “I didn’t purchase anything for $3,926.01, so why is there a hold on my account for that amount?” the nurse is heard asking.

    The customer service representative replied: “I am seeing here ‘stop salary’ and the remark is ‘GOB’ and I would think that the GOB is the Government of Barbados.”

    He then advised the nurse to contact the branch for further details.

    While this media house has been unable to independently verify the recording, Senator Franklyn claimed it was indeed the voice of one of his members. He believes the move was a malicious and spiteful attempt to ensure the nurses have no money for Christmas.

    But according to Minister Straughn, the nurses should only see deductions for the time they were off the job, based on calculations made before their salaries were uploaded.

    “There is no administrative capacity, no technical capacity, nothing at all that the Government can do to interface or interact with anybody’s bank account. We do not have the ability to do that and I don’t think that the Government has any intention of doing that,” he said.

    “I’ve heard the voice notes, but if anybody understands how these things work generally, then you would recognise that people are making up stuff, saying stuff. It’s in circulation, but the Government does not have the capacity to be able to interface with anybody’s bank account.

    “There is no way a financial institution would allow a third party to have access to the bank records in the bank systems. It would not make sense. It just would not make sense,” Straughn maintained.

    In the meantime, however, Franklyn admitted that already some nurses were finding it difficult to make ends meet. In the absence of a strike fund, he calculated that donations totalling approximately $50,000 would assist the nurses through the period of industrial action.

    He has therefore invited Barbadians who support the cause to send donations to account number 108291982001 at the Warrens branch of Republic Bank (Barbados) Limited.

    “That calculation is based on the mean of the nurses pay, because I didn’t have figures for each of the nurses, so I went around the middle of the salary scale and I worked out a figure for the two weeks,” Franklyn told Barbados TODAY.

    Adding insult to injury, he said, is the fact that nurses are the lowest paid public servants whose job requires them to have a four-year degree.

    Democratic Labour Party (DLP) spokesman Paul Gibson reached out to this newspaper expressing concern about the situation and backed the initiative to assist them through the Yuletide season.

    “They’ve put up with a lot and I would like Barbadians to step forward and volunteer. At this time of Christmas, at this time of sharing and giving, this would be a very good signal of solidarity with the nursing community of Barbados, so that the nurses can be taken care of and paid what they duly deserve,” he added. kareemsmith@barbadostoday.bb


  6. Obviously, all the issues raised by the nurses are valid and must be addressed now!

    Patient care is also affected when nurses are unnecessarily stressed or feeling unwell themselves. They are, after all, only human.

    Short-term pain in the hopes of long-term gain, Barbados! Healthier nurses, both mentally and physically should serve us better in the long run.

    The first rule of caretaking is that the caretaker must take care of herself (or himself) in order to be able to take care of others.

    I have often felt concern for nurses who walk the the long road from the St. Philip District Hospital at night. Government buildings are NEVER well-cleaned and make people sick. Late and sporadic pay needs no discussion.

    Give the striking nurses back their salary! Their cause is a just one which was CAUSED, not by nurses, by the inefficiencies of Government.

    In short, if Government had done its job the nurses would not have had to strike.

    This is far from the first time these grievances have been raised. The nurses have been more patient than they should have been.

    You cannot be wrong and make the wronged pay for your mistakes.


  7. The link itself is trending am throwing it out in the international arena. Let the whole world read.

    https://caribbeanempowerment.wordpress.com/2021/12/21/barbados-all-out-to-support-the-striking-nurses/


  8. DavidDecember 22, 2021 4:43 AM

    Le us see how many of you making noise will support the cause by digging into your wallets/purses.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    If cheques issued by banks have been bouncing overseas, why would it seem strange that the crashing economy has not hit many other people hard?

    Maybe the noise being made is in sympathy for their plight in a crashing economy.


  9. Steuspe


  10. David,

    If the Government does not restore the salaries, I will contribute.

    It ain’t over yet!


  11. @Donna

    With a general election on the horizon the government finds itself in a pickle. To pay the nurses on strike is a fail. To do nothing the situation has the potential to escalate /mushroom – take your pick.


  12. “With a general election on the horizon the government finds itself in a pickle”

    Opposition would love the dispute to run a long time to become an election issue.

    Government has power to impose more lock down on all due to Covid spreading.


  13. As someone pointed out, someone pulled the pin on the grenade, forgot to throw it and BLEW UP THEMSELVES WORLDWIDE….ON THE WORLDSTAGE…..should not be a problem, they too LOVE PARADING.

    the only agenda of parliament negros is to beg for votes, then oppress and suppress the majority population to keep their corruption and scams running smoothly, to enrich themselves and their bribers….that is what the population have come to realize that they are BEING USED FOR….now they can take it from there.


  14. Government’s long term plans will now require more Nurses to be recruited and trained for Covid treatment and vaccination programs

    Advice to Medics


  15. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    I know a nurse that would have been overjoyed to get a stop pay on her money. Worked a whole month, was never on strike, went to the bank and got paid zero dollars and zero cents $0.00 for December payday and still have to go work daily and this is not the first time it happened either.

    The Government and Health Authorities in charge have gotten so good at lying that they can now look you full in your face, have no shame and look you full in your face and lie worse than a politician. They had lots of practise with all the COVID lies they told the public.

    It is high time the BNA head and BNA stop playing games and start behaving more like Caswell and UWU.


  16. David,

    I see it differently. Two weeks ago my son demanded an apology and I gave it. I was wrong. I feel that has enhanced our relationship.

    Admitting that one was hasty and wrong would be a good thing to signal a reset in attitude.

    Last time Caswell spoke up was with the “two pensions” issue when Government deemed erroneously deemed NIS BENEFITS to medically unfit retirees as pension. Caswell explained that it was actually an extended sickness benefit that would cease at retirement age.

    Government restored the pension but Ryan Straughn still belligerently yelled, “Make no mistake! It is still a pension.”

    It is not, no matter what the NIS booklet says, a pension in the true sense of the word neither is it what was intended in the legislation. Caswell thinks logically not by some booklet.

    Admitting one is wrong makes a person look BIGGER not smaller!


  17. Uh-oh! Two “deemeds”


  18. @Donna

    Your approach is recommended to building wholesome relationships with others, in the world of politics such an approach becomes muddied although the principle is the same if you want to grow trust between stakeholders.

    Go figure.


  19. People lean one way or the other but it is the mid-point where agreements are made by listening to both sides and also the reality of situation and consequences of actions that will bear out


  20. and these FRAUDS WON’T STOP LYING..

    YOU DON’T HAVE TO INTERFACE WITH THE ACCOUNTS….idiot….all you have to do is give the banks who already CANNOT BE TRUSTED…a LIE coming from the government that they have a track record of colluding with….and the nurse’s accounts got BLOCKED….no bank or government should be meddling in CUSTOMER’S ACCOUNTS only police and ONLY DURING A CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION….LIARS…now they are trying to say the bank did it on ITS OWN//..

    “There is no administrative capacity, no technical capacity, nothing at all that the Government can do to interface or interact with anybody’s bank account. We do not have the ability to do that and I don’t think that the Government has any intention of doing that,” he said.

    “I’ve heard the voice notes, but if anybody understands how these things work generally, then you would recognise that people are making up stuff, saying stuff. It’s in circulation, but the Government does not have the capacity to be able to interface with anybody’s bank account.”


  21. This is true and defines good negotiating where there are high expectations for positive outcomes.


  22. I heard the vioce note and KNOWING FIRST HAND HOW BANKS OPERATE with accounts…the person perusing the pages to give the customer information about what they requested had no reason to lie and WAS TELLING THE TRUTH…


  23. Pay anyone to strike is to encourage more strikes by other In the future


  24. @ DavidDecember 22, 2021 4:43 AM
    Let us see how many of you making noise will support the cause by digging into your wallets/purses.

    ###################

    I have already made my contribution to the nurses’ fighting fund and call on others to do the same. Just give whatever you can manage, no matter how small. Every little bit will help. The main thing is that as Bajans, whether at home or abroad, we send the government a clear message that we won’t sit down arms folded and watch them starve the nurses into submission, especially during this holiday period. That’s not who we are.

    Right now, the government is reaching for every dirty trick it can find in the divide and rule toolkit of the colonialsts. Just imagine after over 3 years in power, they are suddenly able to reach agreement on addressing some of the nurses’ grievances but the agreement involves excluding the UWU which represents the striking nurses. They may think they are the smartest people in the room and Bajans are too foolish to understand what’s going on but they should remember that one smart ded at two smart door.


  25. AND…the LIARS in the parliament must remember that when anyone gets ill…the FIRST person they meet on being admitted to the hospitals ARE THE NURSES….long before they see a doctor….so continue MISTREATING THEM…

    no one has any problem supporting Caswell’s cause to help the nurses financially BECAUSE EVERYONE WILL END UP IN THE HOSPITAL SOME DAY….everyone except the PARLIAMENT FRAUDS..


  26. David,

    Yes, I understand that opposition forces would attempt to sling the mud of the initial mistake but I trust the people to appreciate the admission of fallibility and the willingness to atone.

    A fistful of mud vs a breath of fresh air – I think the people would enjoy the fresh air more.

    What the people need is a rekindling of the hope that justice is within reach.

    A new day and a signalling of a reset would serve the new republic well.

    Mia should not let a good crisis be wasted!


  27. Let it be very clear what the law is- only a court order can instruct financial institutions to freeze a customers account. Senator Franklyn is reported in the media and having the matter investigated, sensible people should wait before jumping to conclusions.


  28. @Donna

    Unfortunately what you are saying is the ideal scenario, unfortunately we operate in less than perfect situation.


  29. Paying anybody to strike will NOT encourage Bajans to strike WITHOUT CAUSE!

    BAJANS GENERALLY DO NOT LIKE TO STRIKE. SOME NURSES WERE IN TEARS!

    You who sit there with your regular salary in your account should consider these things.

    Could be that later today my son or I may need a nurse who is on strike and yet I can see out of more than one damn eye.

    You should try it!


  30. @David
    Let it be very clear what the law is- only a court order can instruct financial institutions to freeze a customers account.
    ++++++++++++++++
    I think that there is a misunderstanding, freezing an account is different from withholding pay which is referred to as “docking”, as far as I know an employer has the right to ask the Financial Institution to withhold pay which has not been earned or which has been paid in error and from what I read it is the pay that has been frozen not the entire Bank account.

    Just trying to explain my understanding but some legal beagle could put me right


  31. Thanks Sargeant, your clarification is accepted.


  32. Obviously the cause here is just. Everybody knows it! In the case of just cause, where an inordinate amount of patience has been displayed, where people are bloody well working WITHOUT REGULAR PAY – THE SALARIES SHOULD BE RESTORED.

    GOOD LORD! I argued that at age twenty during Personnel Management and Industrial Relations classes at Cave Hill!

    Steupse, man! Steupse!
    .

  33. Sick & fed-up of public sector bad treatment Avatar
    Sick & fed-up of public sector bad treatment

    I have a few questions which I think are valid:
    If/when the striking public health nurses get all that they are asking/demanding and if I donate to the so-called “Help Our Nurses Fund”…
    A) is the public going to get better service?
    B). Would the public still be shouted at and treated like animals at public healthcare facilities?
    C) are the elderly going to get priority care or will they still be left on gurneys to die while younger persons & friends get the much needed medication?
    D) Will the same elderly be turned and/or rotated frequently so that they don’t get bedsores?
    E) are the nurses going to answer the phones on the wards or will they continue to sit at the desks, look pretty while gossiping?
    F) will a nurse come to my bedside when I press the button or will they continue to ignore because I’m disturbing their sleep or WhatsApps chat period?
    G) is a nurse going to take the time to feed the patients who are incapable of feeding themselves rather than just pushing the food at them (again like animals) and afterwards sending the full tray of food back saying that the patient is not eating?

    If Mr Franklin and/or the nurses associate can guarantee that the public health nurses will change their “you need me but I don’t need you” attitudes, then I will donate my total monthly salary for the next 3 months to the fund!!


  34. Sarge is correct! I thought I was getting confused or something because such a fuss was being made. I did have a little difficulty reconciling the amounts the lady said were being withheld. But two weeks pay and the one week they get paid in advance of the end of the month could be about right.

    And, stop payment orders can still be issued, no?

    Still, a bad move by the Government.

    Docking pay does not usually happen when monies have already been transferred to the banks.


  35. END UP IN THE HOSPITAL SOME DAY….everyone except the PARLIAMENT FRAUDS…..their Slaves and PIMPS…


  36. @ Donna
    What do you really expect . Teachers will bend over backwards to assist students at various levels but once they express dissatisfaction with any policy, they are accused of not being interested in “de children”;?police get the same shit ; they are supporting the criminals and that is where the nurses are today and the nasty propaganda about not caring for “de patients “is used.
    Well, that type of BS is getting old. We can find money to pay everybody else but when it comes to the ones we need most , they are supposed to go broke for some common good.
    Teachers, nurses and police have always had to suck salt to please a public that swallows the crap fed to them by unscrupulous politicians and leaders from BOTH political parties.
    Time to stop the BS.


  37. We all know that the people WHO GAVE THE BANK INSTRUCTIONS to FREEZE the nurses accounts are the ones who have to GIVE INSTRUCTIONS TO UNFREEZE them…the bank CANNOT ACT without it….but since they are making it seem like the bank took it upon THEMSELVES to freeze the account….this has to be TAKEN UP with corporate in Jamaica and TAKEN MUCH FURTHER………

    running around on the world stage went to their heads like we knew it would and now landed them in their own WELL FILLED WITH SHIT..


  38. Hold vs freeze is correct…

    it’s just that “frozen” comes easier….lol


  39. I am for the nurses getting paid

    I have already stated that it should be part of the negotiations when both parties return to the table,

    I don’t get paid for time I don’t work.
    If I get to work 8 minutes late I am docked
    15 mins etc

    I still stand by my statement

    Already some are saying the nurses should get paid because the teachers got paid – did the teacher strike ?

    When BWA strike did the get paid?
    GAIA?

    Next time they strike the would be doing so and demanding to get paid because “ the nurses got paid”

    Getting paid for striking should be out of the unions strike funds

    Government need to step up and do some corrections
    The unions need to step up and establish strike funds


  40. I am extremely disappointed in the editorial that was posted at 4:37 a.m.
    Let me state my position by first giving you a trite quote “You cannot make an omelet without breaking an egg”.

    It is always amusing when a bystander calls on one party in a dispute to “play nice” whilst the other party is not. It makes me wonder if the bystander has a dog in the fight. As there is no heavy thinking involved and as this was just an attempt to fill space in a newspaper, I will just gloss over a few excerpts.

    I love this phrase
    “While I don’t want to get caught up in the back and forth between Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley and Franklyn that has dominated headlines in the media for the past week, I have to admit I was disappointed to hear his comments when he reportedly addressed the relationship of the striking nurses to their patients.”
    The author has already laid several deadly body blows on Franklyn and now claims to be impartial. Please read the article for yourself as I do not wish to repeat what I think is biased commentary.

    “I have long admired and respected Franklyn. I know him professionally and personally and have never passed him on the streets. However, that comment rubbed me the wrong way. Truth is, if the words were not said they could not have been taken out of context.”
    In my opinion, this is a silly statement. It is true that words must be said/written to be taken out of context. As any phrase can be taken out of context or cut-up inappropriately is the writer advocating that Caswell says absolutely nothing at all times? Ridiculous.

    “While I understand fighting for your rights and what you think you truly deserve, there must be a human and social side to all of this, especially at this time when the country is facing a global pandemic.
    Some may also say this is indeed the right time to get the attention of those in authority who can make a difference to your situation. I say this is a time to have a heart, and appeal to people’s sense of reason to sit and amicably work out this situation.”
    If one were to follow, the above fallacious reasoning to its conclusion, the civil rights marches, the bus boycotts … would never have taken place. This is the kind of thinking that tells you that changes can come without making anyone uncomfortable. In the fight for civil rights, the author would be lambasting Malcolm X, MLK, Rosa Parks ..etc

    I leave you to form your own conclusion, but on reading this piece, I did not feel it was worthy of being an editorial. Clearly, the author has chosen a side.


  41. @blogmaster
    “With a general election on the horizon the government finds itself in a pickle. To pay the nurses on strike is a fail. To do nothing the situation has the potential to escalate /mushroom – take your pick.”

    Left out of your choices is ‘Doing what is right’. I hold you to a higher standard than I hold the average blogger.


  42. There s no doing what is right when it comes to wining political capital. There is the old and recurring debate if there is something called political morality. The government is the BLP political party and they will do what it takes to win the upcoming election. What this means is that the BLP regards Caswell a maverick (lose cannon)- take you pick- and all will be done to blunt his attacks. Guess what, if it were the DLP the strategy would be same. The BU Archive is there to support.

  43. Critical Analyzer Avatar

    Somebody has overstepped their authority with the placement of the hold on the salary.

    A bank can be asked to stop or reverse a transfer made in error but to hold pay already transferred until after the official payday is a serious overreach.

    Bajans need to learn financial management and the importance of having official correspondence. A voice note circulating between a bank client and customer service rep is not proof.

    The bank would never have held the money without some official correspondence either written or email so anyone in that position should visit the bank and immediately obtain a letter from the bank stating the reason for the hold on their salary after payday.

    I also would not expect the bank to honor a request to withhold part of a salary they received either as that breaks expected accounting principles. But I would expect them to state, they will hold the entire amount until the matter is fixed and the correct amount sent.


  44. @Sick & fed-up of public sector bad treatment
    “If Mr Franklin and/or the nurses associate can guarantee that the public health nurses will change their “you need me but I don’t need you” attitudes, then I will donate my total monthly salary for the next 3 months to the fund!!”

    Why end on a lie? You made your statement and could have ended it there. I would bet my last dollar, that there is nothing Caswell or the nurses can do that would pry a penny from your pocket.


  45. The great thing about politicians/parliamentarians, is that they don’t need to work to get paid. They just don’t turn up. No strike or union necessary.
    Animal Farm: All animals are equal but some …………………,


  46. From whom would the strike funds be collected? Workers should not have to fund themselves in an OBVIOUSLY just cause.

    Workers who are contracted to be paid monthly at a particular time and do not receive their pay on time cannot be said to have broken their contract.

    It is the GOVERNMENT who has broken the contract!

    This is not under dispute.

    Some penalty should accompany that. That penalty should be the strike pay.


  47. If it weren’t for the winter season and if we didn’t have so many nice tourists on our island, I’d advocate declaring a state of siege and imposing martial law.

    Our Supreme Leader must finally crack down and take the outspoken Senator into protective custody! Who knows if he is even vaccinated and possibly a threat to people, party and the state.


  48. The answer to Fed Up is yes in some cases and no in others. Some nurses may be stressed and others are just “horstylish” by nature.

    I have met more pleasant and accomodating nurses than the other kind. Unfortunately, some people remember only their bad experiences. For me, good and bad experiences last equally as long.

    There will be good and bad performers in every profession. When one encounters poor service one should follow the procedures for lodging complaints. Often, it works.

    But good nurses should not have to suffer for the actions of the bad.

    These are separate issies and should be dealt with as such.

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