Submitted by William Skinner

In a recent post @TheoGazerts, suggested that my mirror image of our country, at this critical juncture, would be interesting. My mirror image of the country has not dramatically changed over the last fifty years. I still see an extremely conservative people, afraid of our past and extremely timid about our future. Too many are devoted to a nostalgic period, which is not returning and even those who profess to want change usually wilt, when the enormity of engineering it is revealed.

There are many who have thrown an old bed sheet over the mirror to hide the image they do not want to see. We have moved away from Little England and are now apparently living comfortably in Little Brooklyn. An amazing irony, of creating the often-maligned Diaspora, right here in Bim!

The cultural penetration, that most progressive voices warned of in the sixties, has been realized and there is extraordinarily little, that successive administrations, have done to curb our enthusiasm for things foreign. Our collective image of Barbados is one littered with sunworshippers from the tips of St. Lucy to Christ Church. Even the utter devastation wrought by COVID, and the persistent tremors in so-called source markets, from where we hail the blistered bodies with specks of sand, have not deterred us from putting our already slender economic future in such sunburnt fun seekers. But that is who we are and more frighteningly, whom we want to be.

We dare not remove the old bed sheet. The image of a well-functioning political engine, as our Prime Minister, now considered, the shining light of the Caribbean and a global political influencer emerges. Adroit at entering the kitchen and recreating dishes, which have been long tried and left to freeze, thawing them out and declaring those new recipes for development. The classical image of skillfully warmed-over soup now dominates our mirror image.

It is the image of a country, that obviously depends on the political docility of its populace to embrace and endure, the corrupt and sinister collective leadership of two political parties, which have long emptied their bowels of any remote semblance of progressive socio-economic policies.

I still visualize, a new and vibrant citizen emerging from our current predicament, within the next quarter century. Our youth are showing exceptional talents in business, the arts, and all aspects of social and economic endeavors. In many instances their ability to overcome the obstacles are rooted in the fact that most of them inherited no generational wealth, to propel them to the next level.

The story that recently appeared in the local press of a six-year-old girl, selling her first piece of art, is the best way to sum up the hope of the nation. We must invest in the cradle our end up as old broke and broken citizens in the grave.

Those who may want to declare this piece as pessimistic and a warped sense of a fading nationalism, should remember that optimism devoid of realism, is nothing more than delusion. It is high time to remove the old bed sheet from over the mirrors and see it for what it is; and change it.

Happy to oblige @TheoGazerts.

Peace.

Viva Barbados

Viva the Caribbean

81 responses to “Blurred Mirror Image”


  1. “I empathise with you We do need to examine where we as individual citizens have not lived up to our part of the agreement and redouble our efforts. It is not about us : it is about all of us.”

    You should watch Raised by Wolves Season 2 Episode 4 Review: ‘Control’
    Mother has regained her eyes — she’s weaponized again — and she’s already taken down The Trust. She’s now the one in charge of the Atheist collective and is claiming she wants everyone to have freedom and eventually govern themselves


  2. A black hole, a glass of milk and a cat walk into a bar..
    The glass of milk asks the cat “why does the black hole have to tag along with us, everywhere he goes he sucks up all the energy.”

  3. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Skinner, very well said. And to @Codrington re the origination of the ‘mirror image’ you are also right re: _”The original coiner of this phrase intended that Barbadians look into the mirror and examine the reflection of the person therein…”

    Mr. Barrow spoke quite ‘sweetly’ that night but for all the soaring oratory he was quite contradictory himself when he dulled that self same mirror image and cussed the then US President reflecting the part when you said “Surely it cannot be about deprecating statements made about Barbados and the leaders of GoB [nor the world]?”

    EWB directly said he wanted us to “have self-respect […] have a desire to move [the country forward by [our] own devices [and not be] waiting for anybody to come and give [us] handouts.”

    He shamed us when he bold facedly said “If there are corrupt ministers in Barbados tonight, you have made them corrupt.” because as he said: “… although the law says that he that giveth is as much guilty of bribery and corruption under the Corrupt Practices Act as he that receiveth, we know that even on polling day, people were given envelopes with $100 bills in them.”

    He told us that we are a bunch of lying, good for nothing scallywags whose “… greatest ambition is to try to prove to the people of the United States Consulate that you are only going up to visit your family […] and you are the only person dishonest enough with yourself to realise that you do not have a strong reason to return to Barbados, because Barbados has nothing to offer you. You are not being honest with yourself, but you tell the man down there, ‘Oh yes, I’m returning.’”

    But then he lambasted Ronald Reagan in a very snobbish Bajan way when he said: “If Reagan had to take the test [a reading proficiency test] , I wonder if he would pass.”

    In simple term we are still exactly as he described us then and his persona is exactly as we mimic too: we speak in soaring terms and yet so incredulously badly reflect that which we rail against!

    So what exactly is the imaging that we are trying to mirror … do we even UNDERSTAND the reflections staring back at us!

    Thus it always will remain:

    I’m starting with the man in the mirror
    I’m asking him to change his ways
    And no message could have been any clearer
    If you want to make [Bim] a better place
    Take a look at yourself, and then make a change”

    Not Barrow, Not Adams or not Walcott … they polished their mirror images and we have to shine ours too. And NOT with any damn Windex either!


  4. This image is crystal clear

    Read ePaper
    Home / Local News / Some former LIAT workers to get monies owed

    Some former LIAT workers to get monies owed – by Emmanuel Joseph April 27, 2022
    The St Lucia government, which is not a shareholder in LIAT, on Tuesday announced that it will pay all outstanding monies owed to its citizens who were terminated by the regional airline two years ago.

    Prime Minister Phillip J Pierre broke the news today during his 2022 maiden budget presentation to Parliament in which he promised that termination payments due to former St Lucian LIAT workers will be settled.

    “The government has entered into an arrangement with the non-management LIAT workers who were terminated by the closure of the company in 2020. We are currently in discussion with the former management staff, including the pilots, to arrive at an acceptable settlement,” Prime Minister Pierre revealed.

    “Our decision to settle these outstanding payments is yet another demonstration of our continued commitment to the upliftment of the welfare of the workers of St Lucia,” he told Parliament.

    While some of the former Barbadian LIAT employees welcomed the intended settlement for their counterparts in a country with no shareholding interest in the airline, they expressed bewilderment regarding the position of the Barbados government, the majority stakeholder in the company.

    The Mia Mottley government had been giving the ex-workers from Barbados a monthly advance of $2,000 to run for a year, but on March 31, on the eve of the second anniversary of the termination of the LIAT employees, one of the affected pilots from Barbados, who did not want to be named, said they were informed that the payment had been discontinued, two months short of the promised 12-month period.

    “The last payment was already made this month [March]. So we are in no-man’s land. People were expecting 12 months and then some further assistance to get the matter settled. But the employees were notified about two weeks ago now, that the tenth payment would be the last payment. We are just awaiting further [word]. We are very much in the wilderness here,” the ex-Bajan pilot stated.

    Minister of Tourism and International Transport Senator Lisa Cummins could not be reached for comment this evening. (EJ)


  5. “So what exactly is the imaging that we are trying to mirror … do we even UNDERSTAND the reflections staring back at us!”

    many Bajans are Americans
    citizenship can change
    children born there are yanks


  6. @Dee Word

    A reasonable comment. At the root is the cultural penetration mentioned. It seems we have no core values to reference or frame that Bajan identify;value set, some of us love to romanticize.


  7. In every exam, we will always find some who are unprepared.Give more time and some will still be unprepared.

    Sometime in the past, there was a call to regrade some papers. This year the call is for more time to study. What will it be next year?

    Give an inch and folks will try to take a mile. CXC need to stand firm or it will find itself being challenged every year.


  8. ,*some time

    Some folks are throwing their weight around with the sole purpose of mollycoddling these youngsters.

    This is sheer speculation on my part, but I doubt if this call for an extension was to benefit all students. This is for the benefit of a few.

    When this select few get their scholarships and move to universities outside of the Caribbean, real life will kick them in the ass. Big shot parents become just a cog in one of several wheels. Rescheduling is a thing of the past.

    CXC must stand firm.


  9. TheO,

    The children hardly went to school. The issue seems to be made worse by technological requirements.

    These are special circumstances caused by covid.

    Next year should be different.

    Please!


  10. And as for AC, do I have the resources to help everyone who needs help? I do what I can. I am referring here to our government taking some action to assist.


  11. @ Donna April 27, 2022 10:04 AM
    (Quote).
    I wish to thank Marsha Hinds-Layne for her commitment to dragging Barbados forward wrt the way we deal with children who have issues, most of which are NOT of their own making.

    I am appalled that these children, neither of whom should have been criminalised for “wandering”, are still being characterised by the media as delinquents who have “escaped” rather than run away from situations in which they were uncomfortable.

    What insensitivity! THIS is part of the problem. Who edits these articles? Do they not know that words matter? Do they not know how their words can shape the perception of their readers?

    Most girls “wander” for good reasons. Most people don’t run away from good treatment.
    (Unquote).
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    A beautifully sensitive contribution there, Donna, for your heart is truly in the right place ! Even animals run away from bad treatment.

    9 out of 10 times these girls are running away from conditions involving child abuse; especially of the sexual ‘breed’ (no pun intended).

    And that is the reality the pseudo preachers of Bajan morality refuse to confront.

    It’s ‘high’ time the authorities stop with the blatant violation of the rights of those vulnerable children as enshrined in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child to which Barbados has been a long-term signatory but adhering more in the breaching of those very rights rather than their morally right observance.

    Even your friend Jesus was specifically instructive on the need to protect and love our children; so why can’t so-called Christian-minded Bajans?


  12. angela cox April 27, 2022 6:40 PM #: “This image is crystal clear.”

    Since the “image is crystal clear,” please explain to those of us to whom the “image” is ‘cloudy.’

    What is “crystal clear” to me and anyone who has been following the LIAT saga, is a blatant display of irresponsible journalism.

    Firstly, I congratulate the new Phillip J Pierre administration of St. Lucia for making arrangements to pay former St. Lucian LIAT employees.
    It is the least that island could do under the circumstances, especially after its economy benefited for years off the backs of taxpayers of the shareholder islands, while continually refusing to invest in LIAT.

    Secondly, the former LIAT employees based in Barbados, would have contributed to the NIS and were paid unemployment benefits. They were also to be paid severance payments through expedited hearings by the NIS Tribunal.

    As it relates to those Barbadians employees that were BASED IN ANTIGUA, they would’ve contributed to ANU’s Social Security Scheme and are entitled to severance under that island’s laws.

    The GoB made arrangements for them (Barbadian former LIAT employees BASED IN ANTIGUA) to receive an advance of $2,000 per month, for one year, which was supposed to have been terminated earlier if they were able to find alternative employment before the end of the proposed period, and “to be paid back at a future date from any eventual severance settlement.”

    Why were the payments discontinued?

    Did the former employees received their severance payments from the Government of Antigua & Barbuda?

    These are important questions that should be answered before jumping to conclusions.

    Also, remember, iCaribbean Airways took over the operations of LIAT and hired several of the former airline’s employees.


  13. This year, a special International Leader Award was added to honour Mia Mottley, the Prime Minister of Barbados.

    https://canadiansme.ca/the-bbpa-announces-the-recipients-of-the40th-annual-harry-jerome-awards/


  14. Tenantries Freehold Act — A joke on the working class?
    “The most revolutionary piece of legislation outside the Americas and Cuba.” That’s how the Honourable Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley described the Tenantries Freehold Act at the republic celebrations.
    “It is doubtful that in the annals of the history of Barbados whether any initiative will be as encompassing, of the scale, or as uplifting of the spirit as the social and economic revolution of the Tenantries Act.” —Honourable Owen Arthur, Tom Adams Memorial Lecture.
    You would think that with such public acclamations for this piece of legislation that, in practice, the government would do everything in its power to ensure eligible Barbadians benefit fully from this Act.
    You would think those who qualify would actually get easy access to the subsidies they are entitled to by law: PART II Principle for the determination of purchase price of lots within other tenantries [2001-19] 1.
    The price payable by the tenant for a lot in a tenantry other than a plantation tenantry shall not exceed $2.50 per square foot; but where the open market price of the lot exceeds $2.50 per square foot, there shall be payable to the landlord a Government subsidy of the difference between the open market price and the $2.50.
    However, it seems the talk on the platforms is miles apart from the reality on the ground. It seems this “great” Act is only an act because every day, many Barbadians are being deprived of their rights to these subsidies. When was the last time Urban Development received a cent from the government to pay subsidies to those on tenantry land? Very reliable sources say not since 2015. So for 7 years, no government has seen it worthy to allocate any money to ensure this “revolutionary piece of legislation” creates the social and economic revolution in this country it was intended to by Tom Adams.
    Where has this left the working class tenants? Those who can afford to purchase their lots at the full price can do so.
    But they may lose their moral and legal rights to get a subsidy because refunds are not guaranteed. Woe to those who can’t pay the full price. They continue to be disempowered, disenfranchised, demeaned, ignored, live in worry, and unable to own property and enjoy modern amenities. They are left at the mercy of the landlords. Year by year they get older and their 5-year limit to exercise their right to purchase runs out.
    So Honorable Prime Minister and minister in charge of Urban Development, are you serious about what you said at Golden Square or is this a joke on the working class? Barry Gooding


  15. People don’t spend their life’s looking in mirrors, they look outwards, not inwards for self reflection.
    Why are the following considered threats to society:
    Educated black people
    Strong black people
    Young black teenagers
    Angry black people

    #ilchilee #inspirationalmessages #drumming
    The Rhythm of Life | Inspirational Messages


  16. However what is mind boggling is the PM silence on this sensitive issue surrounding the GIS and the children
    An issue having to deal with children’s abuse and human rights
    I take note of the many other issues involving other ministries that the PM became involved stepping out front delivering PR messages to calm the rising tides
    I also take note that Barbados assigned to several agreements having to deal with human rights and child abuse
    I also take note that the PM have used her sense of advocacy to inform the people of Barbados that barbadians should be a country sensitive to the human rights of others
    Now a problem that begs for sensitivity and corrective measures her leadership is missing throughout the months the story made way across Barbados landscape
    Truly mindboggling and sad 😢😭


  17. Any thing that comes out this PM mouth must be taken with a grain of Epsom salts and flushed down the toilet ASAP
    Her utterances most of the time are hoisted on political meanderings and self interest which only appeals to her foot soldiers
    In a recent article on housing her sound off was to tell Barbadians her intent on making rent disappeared
    However she did not tell.of her social and economic plan in doing so especially for the very low end employee
    Her utterances of recent makes for comedy central in many of her responses in Parliament
    Now absence of an opposition the PM has a bully pulpit to present as many flip.flops and gigs as only she can
    Kind of which reminds me of when Trump was President


  18. A bad vibration of negative energy
    Holding up a mirror to angela AC cox it is difficult to express the feeling of repulsion to her being

  19. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    “Tenantries Freehold Act — A joke on the working class?”

    some say a well oiled, well-used vehicle to tief land and estates from those who can’t fight back that has worked well to enrich the corrupt..,,for decades…long before the 80s when that act was created…to reinforce those crimes…

    “CXC must stand firm.”

    in case you did not notice CXC already had to blink after at least 2 months of “standing firm”..

    .as i said, those 3 weeks are not nearly enuff for these children to learn a new program to download their exams…AND…90% of the parents/guardians/students CANNOT AFFORD an expensive computer in this current economic meltdown….so they will AUTOMATICALLY FAIL for non participation…which will still ONLY BENEFIT THE FEW who can efford to buy a laptop at short notice, it may take some 3 weeks or more to get a bank loan and then still have to learn the program…..’

    on the subject of Liat, these shite islands and corrupt governments love too much free labor WHICH IS SLAVERY…the pilots worked and SHOULD BE PAID….years and years now they have always had problems being paid their salaries and benefits…….while the crooked ass boards with all their crooks on board….had these disgusting looking swollen bellies and faces from feasting like pigs…and taxpayers kept pouring money into the liat hole..

  20. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    CXC is arrogant and backward, hence…all of this is happening, let’s if they screw up the exams this year too, and the CAPE within the next 2 years, i have vested interest, so they are very unlikely to escape…

    . They need EXPOSING even more for that shite they pulled this week…….they will not get away with anything….too disrespectful like they don’t depend on the same parents and students to keep their doors open through taxpayer/government funding…they will not get any pass…

  21. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    CXC tried to pull that same crap last year with the new program and new laptop needed for downloading exams……but it BLEW UP ON THEM and they had to revert to their manual set up…

    this year ..instead of preparing parents for the transition and give them sufficient time and wiggle room for those who need to find 8 gigs of ram and windows laptops because not all laptops are thus equipped, had to search through a bunch and only found 2 that fit the criteria and one was not completely appropriate.

    ..there was only ONE CHOICE..so, choices are very limited….and so is the stock, when i left, i believe they said there were only 4 more left and they had to go to another location to get the one i purchased, because the only one left was a display………..they also have to give parents/guardians/students TIME TO FIND THE MONEY….but no, they came at people on Tuesday to have the laptops by Friday and Thursday today, is a goddamn holiday….and someone is supposed to feel pleased…as far as am concerned CXC owes me and am going to collect one way or the next…..

  22. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    If they weren’t so goddamn uppity they would have known that the Caribbean does not manufacture laptops, or any computers, so STOCK WILL BE LIMITED ACROSS THE REGION…in any GIVEN MONTH..

    ….and these clowns and their annual cockups are the ones setting and grading examination papers for our children and grandchildren…….FAILURES….useless breathers…


  23. Story making the rounds

    Has anyone else heard this?
    “David Ellis ain’t holding the special position anymore”
    he gets dispensed like two panadol…so I hear! I don’t know but anything founded on dishonesty has to fail or collapse at some point in time.

  24. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Tighten ya seatbelts, big ting a go on…lawd.

    “”This afternoon, the Premier of the British Virgin Islands, Andrew Fahie, was arrested in the United States on charges related to drugs trafficking and money laundering.”


  25. WTF? No subsidies paid since 2015??????

    This need further research to expose how many have suffered because of this! This is only half of a story!


  26. What is our mirror image?

    What is our mirror image is a silly question in the land of the blind. Thank God we still have a few one-eye men/women with us

    I have been following various posts and the image that emerges is not a positive one. One minute we are walking with the giants and talking with leaders of major countries (what some consider as punching above our weight). But when we focus on ground zero, the walk does not match the talk.

    What is directly in our control is seriously out of control. Where action is required/desired we are inactive and impotent. Indeed, a more accurate description is that we are only talking above our weight.

    Examples:
    Systems experience problems and take much longer to fix than was scheduled. We then emerge and state that we are ahead of when there were no problems.

    We buy vaccines from beauty supply specialists and the story fades as if it has never happened.

    A state system experiences problem over a number of years, we conduct an investigation and then claims there are no issues with the system. Silence or claims of perfection or doing better are the only responses we know.

    Youngsters flee from a state institution, are captured, returned to the institution and are ‘declared mad’.

    For decades, lawyers’ separate clients from their funds and we are unable to fix this simple problem.
    Instead, we have the Bar Association mouthing the same useless refrain they have made over the years.

    Tourism slogans that are paid for (overpriced), created and no one can repeat one word of the slogan?

    Brilliance is seen as removing the keyword from OFF. No real justification is provided on how and why the decision was made.

    Sam Lord’s Castle is rebuilt and looks more like a modern prison that an old English Castle.

    How can the blind see what is in the mirror? How can they see the empty eyes, the vacant stares, the blank faces which seem to reflect the minds that are devoid of ideas.

    We listen to the soothing voice of an orator, but the words are empty and usually do not apply to us at ground zero. Talking above our weight? Imagine a cheap magician taking the stage, performing many tricks and at the end of the act receives a thunderous applause. As the audience leaves the arena, they know that it was all a show; little of it was real. They move to the next act and will toss fishes at the performing seal.

    What is our mirror image? I do not know. Who are we? Pretenders? Honestly, I do not know


  27. TheOGazerts,

    You should be acknowledged as a member of the elite maguffees on BU.


  28. Some body on.anorher social media platform stated that barbadians mirror image .is a reflection of self hate
    To which I totally agree


  29. @TheoG
    No one can accuse Bajans of having long memories at least there is always Cropover.

    BTW whatever became of Toni Moore? The leader of the largest labour union in the country has disappeared without a trace.


  30. Ssrgeant

    BTW whatever became of Toni Moore? The leader of the largest labour union in the country has disappeared without a trace.
    Xxccc
    Hope u do not get your daily servings of news from Bu
    Toni Moore has been all over the news pushing the goal post away from govt workers need to have an increase
    Replacing it with utterances of workers environment needs and protection
    Same subject matter Union’s turned away from when Caswell brought the issue to govt concern as was mocked


  31. @Sargeant

    You inquired about Toni Moore?

    Moore shines spotlight on unequal pay

    General secretary of the Barbados Workers’ Union, Toni Moore, is questioning how some sectors are getting away with unequal pay and reneging on National Insurance Scheme (NIS) payments for employees.
    In a message to mark May Day today, the Government backbencher also said after linking up with the ruling Barbados Labour Party, there have been some achievements for workers, including a new minimum wage.
    “The BWU is proud that today, in just over 18 months of re-establishing its identity with a political party which supports the aspirations of workers, there have been a number of marked achievements which we can report,” she said.
    Moore said the anomaly that denied workers of the Transport Board access to a gratuity was corrected; and a resolution calling on Government to review its value added tax policy on fuel was submitted and the measure announced in March’s Budget.
    Talks on trade union bill
    She said discussion has started on a Trade Union Recognition Bill after decades of agitation and agony, injustice and indignity faced by workers to have the trade union of their choice represent them. She added the BWU had also caused the Government to accept that the Labour Clauses (Public Contracts) Act could no longer be observed only in the breach.
    “For at a time when a number of capital projects are being anticipated, as the Government works to restore the economy and rebuild public infrastructure, the Government must resist the temptation to enter into contracts at conditions below an acceptable level of social protection – whether for the construction of public works, or for the manufacture of goods or the supply of services,” she warned.
    She applauded the ruling administration for moving to strengthen the legislation but said the BWU was insistent that while it is always a good thing to strengthen and introduce laws, it is more important to enforce existing legislation.
    “One therefore has to wonder why for years companies have been rewarded by successive governments for observing hours and conditions of labour which are less favourable than those established over time. The G4S dispute in late 2020 corrected this at least as far as wages are concerned in the security sector, but in construction it is still glaring where companies pay sometimes at half the rates established in the industry and they get the bulk of Government contracts.”
    More added: “One has to wonder why these companies would be allowed to renege on NIS obligations . . . by consciously misclassifying workers as being on contracts for service and are still getting public contracts. This is why the BWU has been insisting that Government leads by example in this regard. So that even where it is understood that Government might need to walk a tightrope with regard to new hires, given the prescripts of an IMF [International Monetary Fund] programme, the BWU has not accepted that denying a worker social security and protection and possibly even a pension can be excused.
    “A responsible Government must not enter into arrangements where it knows and chooses not to know that it is doing so, where the minimum provisions of decency are not being adhered to,” she said.
    No convincing needed
    In relation to the public service and calls for and against salary increases, Moore said since the BWU’s focus in the past has been on productivity and performance-based bonuses, it did not need to be convinced about increasing the levels of productivity, or jump on any bandwagon “to commit to a national response to encourage renewed personal commitment to work and to work ethic . . .”.
    “We get it, we teach it and live it to the extent that since 2001, it has been an addendum to our rules and regulations. What we do not get is the fact that while there is the call for greater productivity, for every percentage increase given to a worker, an employer
    wants ten times the amount in blood, sweat and tears.
    “So unions still have to be fighting the traditional issues that were being fought before Independence. The simple lesson of which we are reminded daily is that greed does not disappear.
    “There is still a certain class that will continue to fight against enfranchisement and worker empowerment in order to maintain its supremacy over the masses. That is why in 2022, we have an employer in production ready to go to war over a half percentage point increase to workers, in circumstances where that employer openly admits to doing well,” the general secretary said.
    She said the BWU was therefore demanding from the public and private sectors, agreement on a transparent arrangement where effort and output translate to a return for employees.
    In the last Sunday Sun, senior economic advisor to Government Dr Kevin Greenidge said any salary hikes for public officers in response to the rising cost of living should be in line with an increase in productivity.
    Both the Congress of Trade Unions and Staff Association of Barbados and National Union of Public Workers have called for wage increases for public officers – with the last occurring in 2018 – or, at the very least, a coping subsidy.
    Greenidge said while such decisions were up to the Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Mia Amor Mottley, “my view is that any raise on salary must be in line with productivity and we are far from where we need to be in terms of output”.
    ‘Stay in your lane’
    In her message, Moore said: “On issues of public sector increases and related matters, it is fair to say that technical advisors should stay away from public commentary on matters that will be subject to political determinations. I like to call it holding your lane. Where you start by recognising that you really have no place to speak . . . then you should not.
    “We have already signalled to the Government of the need for an increase, but our focus, specifically for the past two years, has been more to do with ensuring that workers are not being taken advantage of using an IMF programme as the basis, or a pandemic and now the war, to push the worker to the point where he is unable to take care of himself and his family,” she said. ( AC)

    Source: Nation

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