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This should be of national interest and focus solely on Barbadosโ€™ Independence.
Submitted by Heather Cole

I am not a big fan of Independence but that is my personal point of view. When I was old enough to understand the differences between the have and the have nots in Barbados, the glamour of independence faded. ย It had become a gem without lustre. ย Despite my opinion, neither I nor any Barbadian must never forget Errol Walton Barrowโ€™s unsurpassed contribution to the development of Barbados. ย None of the institutions he created have been rivalled by any subsequent political leader of this island. ย Even I am amongst the approximately 60% of Barbadians today that benefitted from โ€˜freeโ€™ secondary and tertiary education. ย ย Undeniably, I benefitted from his creating an independent Barbados.

Tudor Rose

I write because even I, who have never been a fan of independence, is offended by the display on the East Wing of the Parliament. ย ย I have ultimately reached the conclusion that those who were responsible grossly misunderstood the assignment or made an egregious decision to manipulate the people of Barbados. The official response did not cut it for me. ย In fact, it is unacceptable.

The topic was simple, celebrating 57 years of Barbadosโ€™ Independence.  What was delivered appears to be in celebration of the Parliament buildings as the symbolism used is in no way connected to the Independence of Barbados.  Not by any stretch of the imagination.  One would have understood if an anniversary of the Parliament building was being celebrated and the designer opted to put the Tudor rose which is featured in the architecture on the building in the national colours, everyone would have understood, there would have been no fall out or a rush to defend the indefensible.

Common sense dictates that the Tudor Rose engulfed in a masonic emblem has nothing to do with the celebrating of 57 years of Independence of Barbados.  The relic though on the Parliament building pertains to a history that is not our own.  

โ€œThese wars of roses were fought between supporters of two rival cadet branches of the royal House of PlantagenetLancaster and York. The wars extinguished the last male line of the House of Lancaster in 1471, leading to the Tudor family inheriting the Lancastrian claim to the throne. Following the war and the extinction of the last male line of the House of York in 1483, a politically arranged marriage united the Houses of Tudor and York, creating a new royal dynasty which inherited the Yorkist claim as well, thereby resolving the conflict.โ€ Henry VII then created the Tudor rose which was white and red as a symbol of uniting the two royal houses.

All this happened about 141 years before the English came to Barbados. ย It was never part of Barbadian history. ย It was never a part of our pre or post-Independence story. ย There is no connection or relevance to Barbados.

One wonders if the designer understood that this is a celebration of Barbadosโ€™ independence in 1966 and, that the Parliament buildings are not being celebrated or any stories from England during the Middle Ages?  Could no symbols of unity be found from the past or in present day Barbados?  Truth be told, the Broken Trident was the only symbol that was required as it is a symbol of our breaking away from colonialism.

Alas, one also wonders if this was a deliberate attempt not to use the symbols of Barbados.ย Will independence be watered down and diluted to lose its meaning to the point where one cannot see its relevance? ย Will there be another set of irrelevant nonsense next year and the year after that until the memory of Independence and Errol Walton Barrow has been eroded? ย Is this the plan? ย Are we also witnessing the eradication of the memory and achievements of Errol Walton Barrow by a slow death of the Barbados he created? ย 

It appears that this assignment was treated like a personal submission to NIFCA which would reflect the designerโ€™s personal interpretation. This should never have happened.  This should be of national interest and focus solely on Barbadosโ€™ Independence. That depiction is simply not within the mirror image of Barbados.

In addition, and more importantly, how could anyone have the audacity to overshadow the occasion of the independence anniversary by hijacking it with the history of another country?  I am baffled to the point where I wonder if on the Parliament building, there will be a rainbow next year.


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129 responses to “Misunderstanding the assignment or an act of manipulation?”


  1. Speaking of politicians, when will their retirement age be addressed? I swear I heard the PM say this needed to be dealt with. To be fair to the PM she never said by when though. Lol


  2. @John A

    It is to be addressed as part of that parliamentary reform commission Cheltenham is chairing.


  3. @ David on November 22, 2023 at 6:09 PM said:

    (Quote):
    @John A
    It is to be addressed as part of that parliamentary reform commission Cheltenham is chairing.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Blogmaster, don’t you think that the “job” of being a politician today is one of those perfectly fitted for being overtaken by the coming Artificial Intelligence (A I) deluge?

    If Medicine, Law and Engineering (or even the Priesthood) can be outsourced to the gravitational allure of A I why not the job of the politician?

    What value do politicians add to the lives of ordinary citizens today that can make a difference to make them immune to the virus of AI?

    If Medicine, Law and Engineering, Accounting (or even the Priesthood) can be outsourced to the gravitational allure of A I why not the job of the politician?

    What value do politicians add to the lives of ordinary citizens today (many of whom are just as โ€˜educatedโ€™ as the very politician) that can make a difference to make them immune to the virus of A I?


  4. @ David

    You cannot in all seriousness look at pension alone as the only benefit to be derived from the NIS.

    1% of employee NIS contributions is allocated to health care service.

    The death benefit is currently $2,800.
    The fact that several Barbadians have decided to apply for it, could perhaps be an indication of “how bad they need it.”

    However, options other than NIS have been available to Barbadians for several years.
    Over the years, people, especially those who could afford to do so, have invested in insurance policies, inclusive of pension and health care plans.
    I invested in my first insurance policy at 20 years old. Fortunately, the monthly premiums for young people are very low, gradually increasing as they become older.

    The credit unions have also been encouraging their members to invest in the various types of registered retirement savings plans.

    Saving money requires financial discipline.
    Similarly, some people make it a priority to tithe 10% of their income to the Church, and others, ‘to throw a meeting turn’ every week.


  5. We are not there yet Miller but the thought of it is alluring.


  6. @Artax

    The blogmasterโ€™s probing should be placed in context regarding attracting self employed people to pay into the fund.


  7. Small businesses key to NIS, says Husbands

    BARBADOSโ€™ ECONOMY could be left โ€œbleeding from a bullet hole in its sideโ€ if the countryโ€™s small business owners and entrepreneurs are not able to make a substantial contribution to retirement savings at the National Insurance Scheme (NIS).

    Minister of State in Foreign Trade and Business Development Sandra Husbands sounded that warning on Tuesday as the House of Assembly debated the National Insurance and Social Security (Amendment) (No. 2) Bill, 2023.

    The St James South representative said this was important given the estimate that small businesses contribute 40 per cent of Barbadosโ€™ gross domestic product.

    Husbands, who praised the contributions of small businesses and entrepreneurs said that the โ€œpressure of the immediateโ€ often made it difficult for them to โ€œbuild the discipline to do the long-term planning required, that the NIS demandsโ€.

    โ€œAnd so very often NIS and . . . and taxes will take a backseat because theyโ€™re not immediate and you are responding to the urgent, what is right in front of you. And this is how so many of them get tripped up in their journey in entrepreneurship,โ€ the minister said, while voicing her pleasure that the legislative changes would make it easier for small business owners to make NIS contributions.

    She said this was important because โ€œwe have come to a situation where a change has to happen because we are actually facing a time bombโ€.

    โ€œThe reason and the importance for making the changes to the National Insurance legislation [is] to allow people to pay contributions, even back paying, allowing them to get injury benefits, allowing them flexibility as to when they pay, these things are an important change in order not only to help the National Insurance Scheme work better, but to stop the Barbadian economy from the bleeding from a bullet hole in its side,โ€ she told the House.

    โ€œWhen you have an ageing society like ours, and you have within the next ten years or so more than half of your population will be over 60 years of age, a lot of those are going to be your entrepreneurs as well.

    โ€œAnd what this means is that the decline in their business activities as they slow down, or as they close, means that . . . 40 per cent contribution to the gross domestic product will start to decline unless Barbados can raise a new generation of entrepreneurs who will step into that space and help to keep that contribution going,โ€ she asserted.

    Husbands added: โ€œThe second loss as those entrepreneurs age will be the contribution that they made to their households, how they were able to help their families, their children, their grandchildren. The other loss will be the employees that they were able to hire and the suppliers that they bought the goods and inputs from and so that is a bullet hole in the side of the economy where you can get some serious bleeding if it is not addressed.โ€

    She said the challenge she outlined meant that โ€œit is in the interest of every single Barbadian to get involved in helping people to get on board with the payment of their National Insurance savingsโ€.

    Noting that young people, especially those in the gig economy rather than full-time employment, face the same challenge, Husbands said this was one of the reasons the Ministry of Energy and Business Development was intensifying its efforts to increase financial literacy in Barbados, including in relation to retirement planning.

    โ€œI believe that one of the things that we need to stress significantly in our population is that issue of retirement planning. We want to do that not just with our seniors but with our middle agers and with our young people, because if they can start early theyโ€™re going to be able to amass sufficient funds that they should be able to take care of themselves in their old age and be able to live a comfortable life,โ€ she said.

    (SC)

    Source: Nation


  8. NIS โ€˜must benefitโ€™ Caricom citizens

    WITH BARBADOS AMONG CARICOM countries committed to full free of movement in the region by March, the National Insurance Scheme (NIS) must be ready to ensure that qualifying people from other nations in the region have access to social security benefits.

    That was the advice on Tuesday from Government back-bencher Edmund Hinkson, who said he was prepared to support more resources being made available to the NIS โ€œto take on this so that there are no challengesโ€.

    The former Minister of Home Affairs was speaking in the House of Assembly yesterday during debate on the National Insurance and Social Security (Amendment) (No. 2) Bill, 2023.

    Hinkson reminded the Chamber that โ€œour Heads of Government have committed our CARICOM statehood to come to closer union in terms of full freedom of movement, I believe the date given at present is March 31 next yearโ€.

    โ€œAnd I know that discussions are going on at many levels, drafting committees, implementation committees, policy committees in various areas on this,โ€ the St James North Member of Parliament said.

    โ€œAs we all know right now we have freedom of movement amongst skilled nationals, Barbados recognises 12 [categories of] skilled nationals at present, but if weโ€™re talking about full freedom of movement between our CARICOM nations, something that is present already in our sub regional group the [Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States], . . .the transferability of social security benefits is of prime importance.โ€

    Pension

    He added: โ€œAnd therefore we have to get this right. In 1996 in Georgetown, the CARICOM nations would have signed an agreement allowing for transferability of national insurance and social security benefits among CARICOM nations and peoples.

    โ€œThat agreement came into effect in April or May in 1997. So for example, a Guyanese worker, whether employed or self employed in Guyana, who comes and lives here can have the benefits in Guyana, which would have accrued in Guyana, added to the benefits here on retirement to bring up the amount of pension that they will get.โ€

    Hinkson pointed out that Barbados โ€œwould be would be obliged to pay the percentage of the benefits which would have accrued while they were working in Barbadosโ€.

    โ€œThe Revised Treaty of Chagauramas which came into effect I think it was in 2005 would have enhanced those rights. I think itโ€™s Clause 237 that speaks about contingency rates, which will be health and education, and national insurance social security benefits,โ€ he said.

    โ€œSo the National Insurance Scheme โ€“ Services as it would be called after this act [is passed] โ€“ has a primary duty and responsibility at CARICOM level to ensure that people can get their benefits as they move across our CARICOM nations seeking work and obtaining work either as employed persons employed by companies etc., which would have the responsibility to deal with their NIS, but also a self employed persons.

    โ€œAnd if it is that the [NIS] needs more resources to take on this so that there are no challenges I will be all for them getting the resources, and for monies to be voted in this Parliament that will cause the National Insurance set up to be more efficient in this regard and to be able to respond better to its customers and to the public,โ€ he said. (SC)


    Source: Nation


  9. @ David on November 22, 2023 at 11:58 PM :

    The ultimate challenge with the implementation of such an ‘alluring’ project would be the art of programming the robot to lie while carrying a ‘straight (poker)’ face.

    But you never know. West Indian politicians (especially the current crop of Bajan Po โ€˜LIEโ€™ ticians might just find their niche in becoming world-class experts in that field.

    A former MoF carrying the pseudonym ‘Sin Liar’ might just be the perfect candidate capable of ticking all the boxes and meeting all the specifications for such a World-Class Job.


  10. BT
    “Granting self-employed persons additional flexibility in paying contributions to the National Insurance Scheme (NIS) has been deemed a โ€œmaster strokeโ€ by Minister of Industry, Innovation, Science and Technology Davidson Ishmael.

    He said the ability to pay contributions online is an added benefit of the fresh process which will start on December 1, 2023, allowing small business persons and entrepreneurs the option of paying a minimum of $1 200 a year towards the social security services which will be known as the National Insurance and Social Security Service (NISSS) from the same date.

    โ€œThey now have a high degree of flexibility on how they are going to make their contributions on a yearly basis. They can even do it once a year. This is a tremendous benefit for a self-employed person,โ€ Ishmael said, adding that the contributions will also cover entrepreneurs in the case of on-the-job injury.

    Speaking in the House of Assembly on Tuesday on the National Insurance and Social Security (Amendment) (No. 2) Bill, 2023, Ishmael noted the legislation also gives people working with other companies the opportunity to bump up their contributions based on earnings from their โ€œside hustlesโ€.
    He noted that they will get reminders via email and text messages that their contributions are due.

    Dear Minister Ishmael. For some years now, the people of Barbados, you know, the voters and their employers who pay into the NIS funds, have asked for Annual Reports. You could send hard copies, or digital in .pdf, word or whatever you choose. We have sent these requests via text, WhatsApp, email and hard copies to no avail
    So sit your ass down and stop talking shite that some new methods will encourage people. It has not worked on the politicians so why should it work on the people.


  11. From BT
    “Earlier in the debate, St George North Member of Parliament Toni Moore, who is also General Secretary of the Barbados Workersโ€™ Union (BWU), said the NIS should ensure that it always has enough resources to carry out and maintain monitoring and enforcement.

    She reminded workers that they have a duty to check to ensure that their deducted monies are being paid into the scheme”

    Now here’s a fucking idiot. She has been an NIS Board member longer than most. Did the RH public employees from whom NIS monies were being deducted but not remitted have an effing clue?
    Or was somebody at the NIS getting an IOU from the GoB saying we trussing de funds, so mek de books look like we paying.
    Ms Moore where are the RH annual reports your Chair(s) were to send?


  12. Poor Eddy Hinckson. The folks making sport, saying (due to a speech challenge) he must have inside info, cause the new NISSS isn’t new, he’s been calling it that for years!!!
    Murdah Bajans can be tough.


  13. The matter of self employed people paying NIS was discussed by Walter yesterday to confirm what we know. It is very hard for self employed people to support proof of claim for an injury on the job.


  14. Again Walter and Caswell reminded us yesterday that the NIS inspectorate does its job but NIS maguffies upstairs usually intervene to halt punitive action against employers blacklisted.


  15. N.O.
    The place is being run by incompetents, and we like it so.

    This way, we brass bowls get sit back and laugh at the idiots fouling up constantly, wasting millions of dollars in the process, while handing all our assets over to foreigners, and signing on to contracts that bind our children to albino-centric directives.
    But the REAL joke is not on the political incompetents…
    It is about the lotta brass bowls who are sitting back laughing …while their goose is being cooked.


  16. I begin with my usual lament ‘I cannot keep up. Too many balls are in play. Too many promises being made. Too many things being tweaked’.

    I am glad that some can follow the bouncing balls. Just going to focus on a few issues
    Constitution Commissionโœ”๏ธ
    Education reformโœ”๏ธ
    Savvyโœ”๏ธ
    Judicial reform โœ”๏ธ
    Savvyโœ”๏ธ

    Off my list
    FTC
    Energy matters
    NIS
    Pending Police matters
    BWA
    Hotel construction
    Beach access .. is the matter in the AG constituency settled?

  17. NorthernObserver Avatar

    Bushie
    Unfortunately there is some truth.
    You frequently speak to the foreign invasion of local businesses.
    Just think how much money between employee remittances and employer contributions the likes of Sagicor, GEL, the host of Massy entities etc etc etc have sent to the NIS.
    And the new CEOs playing dead. The day they sent their monies to an escrow account and seek some accountability, whomever is running the NIS is cooked.
    But they sit idly back….I know a few who would be spinning in their graves.


  18. N.O, are there any laws that prevent local business owners from selling THEIR ASSETS to whomever they please?


  19. …are there any laws that prevent local business owners from selling THEIR ASSETS to whomever they please?
    ~~~~~~~~~
    There is a Law with which you should be VERY familiar..
    “A breach of common sense…..โ€

    Want to sell your home to Bushie for a couple million?
    You and you family are welcome to stay around…for a reasonable rent …..and my rental contract meets international standards…

    You can even name the price….
    …especially if your children are healthy, strong and โ€˜compliantโ€™….


  20. ๐Ÿคฃ ๐Ÿคฃ ๐Ÿคฃ๐Ÿคฃ

    I had to laugh. Seems as though your meds are ‘wearing off.’

    But, then again, you’re a risible guy.
    And, predictable as well.
    ๐Ÿ˜ƒ

    Interestingly, you have been continually advocating for the closure of the Caribbean Examination Council (CXC), because, according to you, “When it comes to the question of being qualified to compete at the GLOBAL LEVEL, there is no damn place for local qualifying standards.”

    There isn’t ANY DENYING that, although the Council has been faced with challenges over the years, which were confronted and overcame, CXC REMAINS an INTERNATIONALLY RECOGNISED qualification.
    CXC certificates has been used by Barbadians and other Caribbean nationals, as prerequisites for entry into international tertiary level institutions and professionally designated programmes such as ACCA and CPA.
    As a result, Barbadians have been able to become “qualified to compete at the GLOBAL LEVEL.”

    Hence, it wouldn’t be unreasonable to consider ‘education’ as a ‘personal and national asset.’

    Bearing those facts in mind, you went on to ‘say’ that, “The CORRECT approach of course would have been to ATTACH ourselves to one of the most respected GLOBAL examination Institutions, and then to prepare our students to excel at THAT levelโ€ฆ..”

    Ironically, Barbados has been “attached to several respected GLOBAL organisations,” including the OECD.
    As indicated on the OECD thread, the island has been forced to increase corporation taxes in accordance with the GloBE rules.

    I’ll remind of your response thereto.
    Bush Tea on November 10, 2023 at 7:22 AM#: “This inherent trait make us into complete BRASS BOWLS when we CHOOSE to adopt the albino-centric, shiite, foreign โ€˜rulesโ€™โ€ฆ.”
    ๐Ÿ˜ƒ

    Yet, you’ve been essentially suggesting we return to the days when decisions relative to the content of our examination syllabus and accreditation of qualifications were made by FOREIGN institutions, such as London, Oxford & Cambridge, LCC and Pitman because, according to you, “there is no damn place for LOCAL qualifying standards.”

    Therefore, by ACCEPTING those FOREIGN examination STANDARDS, wouldn’t we also have to ADOPT and ADAPT to changes made thereto?
    ๐Ÿค”

    Wouldn’t this be also “handing our asset, (education), over to foreigners, and SIGNING on to contracts that BIND our children to albino-centric directives, shiite, foreign ‘rules’,” as well?
    ๐Ÿค”

    So, whether or not rules, guidelines, directives etc are ‘albino-centric,’ should only be determined according to the ‘whims and fancies’ of a Bushman?
    ๐Ÿ˜ƒ

    You have clearly demonstrated what your friend ‘Froon’ described as, “a MONSTROUS PERVERSION of common senseโ€ฆ..โ€
    ๐Ÿ˜‚


  21. @ David

    Please permit me to ‘go off topic’ and offer condolences to the relatives and friends of the late Richard ‘Dick’ Stoute.

    Apparently, PM Mottley visited Stoute in the hospital yesterday and sought his permission to name the amphitheatre at the ‘National Botanical Gardens’ after him.

    Unfortunately, he did not live to attend the naming ceremony.

  22. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @Artax
    Business owners are free to sell to whomever they wish.
    I don’t challenge that.
    Yet, we must accept a handful of elected persons have run the NIS into the ground. Barely a peep out of the employers?
    There seems to be this ‘don’t careish’ attitude. Wha yuh want me to do? The last one who made public reference to the NIS condition was subsequently highlighted by a PM as ‘threatening’ (on other matters) and publicly vilified.
    Just tek it, shut up and carry on.


  23. Artax…
    When you donโ€™t understand a point, or a concept, you should just say so and move on….
    You must know that there are some quite intelligent observers on BU who can perceive when you are at sea…

    Unless of course you “know not that you know not…”


  24. N.O, employers enjoy the luxary of with-holding both employer and employee contributions, and the fund would honour benefit claims from employees. Severance payments to former employees of delinquent employers are usually approved by the NI Tribunal. I know business people who refuse either to deduct NIS contributions from employees’ wages, or don’t remit deductions, especially when they’re experiencing cash flow problems. Unfortunately, government revenue collection policies are extremely poor, resulting in an accumalation of arrears in rents, NIS contributions, VAT, income & corporation taxes. For example, stall rent in the former Golden Square Market was $50 a month, and some vendors had as much as $3,500 in arrears, which is totally ridiculous.


  25. You’re a risible guy. But, you must also bear in mind ‘there are also some quite intelligent BU contributors who can perceive when you are at sea’ as well, and are NOT AFFRAID of your bullshit to remind you. ‘Unless of course,’ in adherence to the proverb, deciding to SHUN you is probably the best option.


  26. The fund has been mismanaged like everything else. We have allowed workers to be robbed by their employers and then we have to honor this criminality and the offending employers walk away .
    Same thing with VAT; taxes and other commitments. We congratulated these heartless offenders by writing off the teefing.
    However, I agree with making the self employed pay NI contributions. Itโ€™s in their interest to so do. And we should be encouraging persons we know , who are self employed , to pay contributions


  27. Have yu ever struggled to complete a problem and felt good about your accomplishment at the end? Have you ever seen a next student step to the blackboard and offer a short sweet and elegant proof that is easy to remember and repeat.

    I see the same problem here. Some seem to want to follow the laborious road and provide tomes fill with answers, perform elaborate calculations, formulate heavy hypotheses and engage in endless debate.

    It is inevitable that with so much effort that some will become frustrated and engage in personal attacks on other theorists. This is not needed I have given you the short and elegant answer but you refuse to accept it, but here I come again.

    Everything is a scam, a sham, a con, a kick of the ball down the road. It is systems functioning in an organized ‘chaos environment’. Put away your pocket calculators and just admit that the con men are too smart for you all. You try to match them but they have moved on to the next scam as you are producing your numbers.

    Looks like a beautiful morning where I am. I hope you can say the same. Have a great day Barbados.
    –*—
    I remember when someone felt that my wishing a beautiful day to Barbados was hypocrisy. A fellow cannot put two thoughts together but believes he know my mind.

    Have a great day Barbados.


  28. Have a great day to you also TheOGazerts.


  29. @Artax
    It seems then, the ‘condition’ exists on both sides of the fence?
    You have employers, who for a myriad of reasons fail to remit/contribute but expect claims to be honoured. And then the you have the NIS maguffies abusing the system and failing to enforce the rules, without fear of reprisal.
    Yet in between, you have employers who have gone to great lengths to ensure the NIS receives its remittances/contributions and they are the ones who should be speaking.
    The same dilemma exists with VAT?
    At some point, unless some enforcement bares its teeth, the system breaks. It becomes a free for all.


  30. It will be difficult in this environment to persuade self employed workers people to contribute to NIS given an erosion of confidence in the fund. There will have to be a push strategy (compelling reason made to do so).


  31. @WS
    While I agree in principle the self employed should participate, how can a self employed person justify paying into something without an AR in umpteen years, followed by a reduction in benefits, which we are likely to see again in future.
    It doesn’t make sense.
    Apart from burying the past, there is nothing in NISSS which will make it more accountable than NIS?
    We know the elected will do as they please, we have seen it for umpteen years.
    We have seen similar with multiple other entities who likewise have flaunted the laws governing their accountability.


  32. @ NO
    I understand your position but , as seems to be the norm, the most vulnerable , at the very least need to protect themselves wherever possible and necessary and hope that their investment in the system does what it is supposed to do. In other words, it is better, to pay into the system and have a fighting chance , to reap benefits, than to discover that you have nothing to get , latter years.I can tell you that I know of a few self employed people who were encouraged to pay contributions. When COVID struck, they were able to get some benefits.

  33. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @WS
    Everybody is vulnerable?
    It is a scheme to benefit ALL members in times of need.
    The path.
    Many have seen, and been able to predict with accuracy the path of the NIS.
    We know the mismanagement and theft, goes beyond the imagination of most. Even my own.
    With the ’18 “debt restructure”, the NIS (compliments of years of buying GoB paper beyond recommended limits) still holds a mountain of GoB paper. In fact, it got more recently, as the GoB didn’t have the cash to repay all the remittances the GoB redirected in former years.
    The next restructure, while the debt will be better split between local and multi-lateral agencies, will also hit the NIS and the CBB.
    And nobody has a clue exactly the hit to, or should I say the level of NIS participation, in a myriad of known/unknown “investments”.
    The mere fact the GoB is withholding reports it claims to have, is further proof the intent is to cover-up what occured. They just cannot sanitize it enough.
    Hence, as a self employed person, the emotional outreach to support brothers and sisters, cuts only for the emotionally inclined and the blind. The ones in control are showing no remorse nor corrective action for the past.
    To contribute is like buying a lottery ticket. While there will be a few winners each draw, the only real winner is that entity skimming off 50%, not the 50% which is distributed.


  34. @ NorthernObserver on November 27, 2023 at 1:29 PM said:

    โ€œThe mere fact the GoB is withholding reports it claims to have, is further proof the intent is to cover-up what occured. They just cannot sanitize it enough.โ€
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    This continuous breaching of the Act governing the operation and management of the NIS is a clear indication of there being more in the Mortar than just the pestle aka the lack of accounting skills and services to complete the job and sign off on those financial reports.

    These promises to complete and present โ€˜auditedโ€™ financial reports to provide a โ€˜fair viewโ€™ on the performance of the NIS go way back to the time of the Ex-banker chairman.

    The probability of endemic fraud and or other widespread financial infelicities should not be discounted or dismissed out of hand.


  35. The most vulnerable by definition are not able to protect themselves in a material way. We have to be careful to simply be spouting nebulously.


  36. The Opposition and members of civil society have a ready made issue in the NIS that will resonate with all Barbadians. Why the party leadership of the DLP doesnโ€™t mobilize a message around the fund inadequacy is unbelievable.


  37. The BU intelligentsia is struggling. When we say transformation, we mean transformation. More legislative, processes, systems and infrastructural transformation to come. Wunna gine be dizzier.๐Ÿคซ


  38. @enuff

    A la EDUTEC?


  39. @ Enuff on November 27, 2023 at 5:18 PM:

    What transformation are you talking about?

    Are you referring to the tens of thousands of used vehicles imported into Lilliputian Barbados over the last 5 years despite international talk of going carbon neutral by 2030?

    You guys can’t even get the tens of thousands of non-road-worthy uninsured vehicles off the highly congested cart roads of tiny Barbados but yet want to talk about greening Barbados.

    Are you reminiscing about the Golden Age of the Adamses Administrations?

    Are you expecting a reincarnation of Grantley & Son to transform Bubadus?

    Barbados is both socially and economically worse off than it was even under the Erskine Sandiford Administration.

    When you guys put your words (political swords) into positive action (ploughshares) then we will listen to you.


  40. “Yet in between, you have employers who have gone to great lengths to ensure the NIS receives its remittances/contributions and they are the ones who should be speaking.”

    @ NorthernObserver

    Although I understand and agree with the point you’re making, there is an ‘inherent human cultural tradition’ whereby some people become concern with an issue ONLY when it affects them directly.

    As long as the laws governing the deduction and remittance of NIS contributions are obeyed, and the benefits to be derived therefrom are achieved, why worry whether or not the political directorate and NI hierarchy obey the laws governing administration of the Scheme, to wit, the National Insurance & Social Security Act?


  41. David
    LMBAO, I just love to tease and taunt the BU intelligentsia. You researched Edutech to see the role it played in exposing Barbadian school children to computers/IT etc from young? You’re here supporting rubbish about the government is trying to erase Barrow’s legacy. The Dems by introducing UWI tuition dismantled one of Barrow’s key legacies–expanded free education. No consultation, no referendum not one ting. Then said he never meant it to be ever. I wonder if he had the same vision for the DLP ie it wasn’t to last forever. Now the same people talking about erasing legacy and want consultation on everything including a temporary mural on the Parliament building. You ready fuh de stadium, legal profession legislation or new sewage plant? Or Heather going to the unveiling of the monument tomorrow to see what she can criticise even though lacking any expertise or understanding? We know Bushie will describe it as albinocentric and devil worship or will argue we should have sought albinocentric advice.๐Ÿคฃ


  42. “……how can a self employed person justify paying into something without an AR in umpteen years, followed by a reduction in benefits, which we are likely to see again in future.
    It doesnโ€™t make sense.”

    @ NorthernObserver

    Again, I understand and share your concerns.

    But, the reality is, based on my experience interacting with small businesses owners, I haven’t come across many of them who make filing income tax returns or contributing to NIS a priority, even long before current developments relating to the Fund.

    They generally do not show any concern with whether or not NI prepare annual reports or how the Fund is administered.

    Some people believe pension is mandatory when they reach pensionable age, only to discover payments are not forthcoming because they did not contribute to the Scheme.

    While others (and individuals) are of the opinion they should file tax returns only if they’re entitled to a refund, or if an issue arises that makes it necessary to do so.


  43. Enuff

    Look out!

    If there is turmoil worldwide and the monument at the Garrison is responsible for the such in Barbados……

    ……. then woe to Barbados after the unveiling of that new monument?

    ๐Ÿคฃ ๐Ÿคฃ ๐Ÿคฃ


  44. ‘Why the party leadership of the DLP doesnโ€™t mobilize a message around the fund inadequacy is unbelievable’

    You’re joking. Barbadians cannot be that gullible. If Barbadians gave a shite about the condition of the NIS, they would be marching every day..lol. And before 2018. If they care, they don’t show it very well.


  45. Enuff

    You canโ€™t be serious. EDUTEC put money in the pockets of a few favoured suppliers. The blogmaster can recall computer hardware dumped in storerooms at St. Leonardโ€™s school for example. The idea was a good one but per usual the project was riddled with the usual problems.


  46. @Artax

    Tell Enuff to have the potholes fixed, then we can have a material conversation about โ€˜transformationโ€™.


  47. David, far from it for me to ask Enuff to do anything, my friend. Perhaps you should’ve asked his nemesis, the Miller, to do so, or another member of the ‘anti Enuff gang’ instead.


  48. Surely the blogmaster’s November 27, 2023, 5:02 AM comments were ‘said in jest.’ The same DLP had TEN (10) YEARS to ‘fix’ the NIS and ‘make the financials current,’ but failed to do so instead. Unless he wants to convince us a NEW president absolves them from blame for ‘inadequacy of the fund.’ But, then again, why should ‘the DLP’s leadership mobilize any message,’ when their Roebuck Street colleagues established the NISS, which essentially serves as a ‘cover up’ for BOTH political parties and absolve them from blame. This ‘new dispensation’ means ‘we’re starting from day one.’ And, the ‘duopoly wins again.’


  49. @Artax

    It was meant to be provocative intervention.


  50. David

    That’s just one side. When you’re ready for granular analysis of the other side, shout me. As for potholes, we building not just patching. But when the party you sang so loudly for leading up to the 2008 election fixes little to nothing in 10yrs, isn’t it unreasonable to ask this government to fix all in less than 5yrs? Again tell all sides of story, give some context–how many roads have been repaired and are being repaired? The ministry posts notices every week, so the info is there. These matters don’t need to be philosophised or intellectualised. Ronnie(wh)o still accusing the government of holding up bridges with wires?๐Ÿคฃ๐Ÿคฃ

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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