
The Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) is standing at the edge of a precipice—weighed down by financial turmoil, mismanagement, and a glaring lack of vision. Once a pillar of public broadcasting, this state-owned enterprise is now spiraling into dysfunction, with staff, contractors, and the very future of the corporation hanging in uncertainty.
A Corporation in Crisis
At the heart of CBC’s decline is deepening financial distress. While the CEO sleeps, employees lie awake worrying about when their salaries will finally arrive—concerns that stretch to cover their children’s school fees, mounting bills, looming mortgage payments, and even their ability to secure credit. The corporation is failing to meet its most basic obligations: salaries are paid late, contractors languish in limbo, and long-serving employees are met with silence instead of security. Restructuring efforts, far from instilling hope, have become little more than a smokescreen, leaving staff anxious and uncertain about their future.
But beyond the financial woes, one must ask: When last has there been a board meeting? When last has there been a management meeting? When last has there been a staff meeting? In an organization built on the very foundation of communication, there is none within its own walls. Silence has replaced leadership, and uncertainty now governs daily operations. The result is a staff left adrift—a corporation operating without strategy, where speculation fills the void left by an absent decision-maker who sits pretty in his office, cut off from employees who, despite their tireless efforts, remain demotivated. The CEO’s glaring lack of hands-on management has rendered CBC rudderless, stifling its potential with leadership that prefers isolation over accountability. Change is desperately needed, yet none is in sight.
A Failure to Evolve
As traditional broadcasting faces an existential crisis worldwide, adaptation is essential. Yet CBC is failing to evolve with the changing media landscape. Digital transformation has been sluggish, content strategies remain uninspired, and the corporation clings to outdated models instead of embracing innovation. While competitors harness new technologies and platforms to engage audiences, CBC is falling further behind—unable to capture or retain viewership in a world dominated by streaming and social media.
Compounding this failure is an ongoing struggle with talent retention. A number of well-known television personalities have walked away, in search of better prospects—a mass exodus that should have been a wake up call that spurred urgent reform. Meanwhile, the opportunity to nurture fresh talent has been largely overlooked. Rather than proactively training new, dynamic faces to take over the flagship Newsnight program and several other shows, the current anchor chairs seemed conjoined to the old guard. This lack of mentorship and succession planning denies CBC the innovative energy and contemporary perspective that are essential for evolving with the times.
Leadership Without Vision—And With Vindictiveness
In a stunning display of misplaced priorities, the CEO has managed to secure an additional $3,000 per month on top of his already generous $15,000 salary—all because he no longer has access to the designated ML company vehicle, now used to transport news teams on assignments. One must ask: if the CEO truly cared about the financial well-being of the corporation, could he not have refused this extra $3,000—perhaps remarking, “I can easily cover my petrol expenses on my already sufficient $15,000 cheque”? Yet that is highly unlikely. It raises the question of whether he himself requested this extra money, stooping so low as to find new ways to cut into the monthly earnings of those who depend on CBC.
Perhaps even more damning is the CEO’s penchant for vindictiveness. In an act that defies both logic and fairness, he dismissed two young men whose fresh energy and dedication had begun to reinvigorate CBC’s local content. Their dismissals were not the result of incompetence or failure, but appeared driven purely by personal spite. And when one considers that this very CEO once served as a senior editor at another media house—responsible for thrusting a sex scandal involving two minors on a school compound onto the front page of a daily publication—one is left to question his judgment. Imagine a man convinced that salacious content was newsworthy enough to dominate headlines; with that track record, his current mismanagement and vindictive behaviour hardly come as a surprise.
The Road to Nowhere
CBC, once an institution that informed, educated, and entertained Barbadians, is now crumbling under the weight of mismanagement and neglect. Financial instability, a draining of talent, an inability to adapt, and leadership utterly devoid of visionary management have left the corporation gasping for relevance. The staff, left in the dark, are losing faith. The audience, with better options elsewhere, is turning away. And those entrusted with steering CBC toward a brighter future are instead watching it flounder—if not actively pushing it toward the edge.
But who will stand up for change at our island’s lone TV station—our CBC—a vital institution that must endure? Will it be the government, the unions, the staff or even the viewers and listeners.Under the current leadership, one is left to ask: how long can CBC continue to fight on?
Sincerely,
An Avid Viewer & Associate of CBC’s CEO







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