What is good for RUSAL bauxite workers must be good for sugar workers also

Dear Editor,

Please grant me the opportunity to flag for the attention and consideration of all my fellow Guyanese, the article in the Guyana Chronicle of Wednesday, September 10th, 2018, entitled, `Task force works out severance pact for RUSAL workers’.

In these times of rapid evolution in technologies and capabilities we must all be concerned that there might be great and rapid changes in the work we do and by which we earn our living.  These do seem to be turbulent times and for more of us than ever before, the job we now have may leave us and for some time we may be seeking another.

Workers in our traditional bauxite and sugar sectors have been facing such turbulence, more or less intensely from time to time, at least since the 1970s, starting with the nationalization of those sectors at that time.  It’s been a rough ride since then for most of our citizens working in bauxite and sugar, and every one of us would be aware of  what is  ongoing presently.

We cannot but be sympathetic with the workers of RUSAL’s bauxite operations in the Berbice River, whose jobs seem to be about to be ended through events in the world at large.  And, therefore, I am supportive of and urge support to those workers: in particular what has been revealed in the article of the recommendations of the Task Force headed by the Honourable Minister Simona Broomes and including the General Secretary of the Guyana Bauxite and General Workers Union, Lincoln Lewis (also formerly President and General Secretary of the Guyana Trades Union Congress, and my bauxite colleague of five decades).

The Chronicle article states that the Task Force recommends that these RUSAL  bauxite workers facing termination be paid  “a similar package that was applied in the case of LINMINE in 1993 and onwards, BERMINE in 2002 and onwards and Omai Gold Mines in 2004, which means that the minimum (severance) pay for each year of service shall be equivalent to six weeks for each year of service to the maximum of two years’ pay in benefits”.

Allow me to say that this is roughly twice what is required in the “Termination of Employment” Law which we the PPP/C Administration enacted in about 1997 as the consensus between Unions, Employers and the Government.

PPP/C  person that I am,  allow me the indulgence to flag that the recommendation quoted above acknowledges how favourably the PPP/C Administration treated with bauxite workers  from 1993 onwards, through 2004 onwards:  from 1993 when there was no law, and twice as well in 2004 and onward  as the consensus law required.  I call on all my fellow Guyanese to at least question the impression which was so often given and which they may have entertained, that we PPP/C have been heartless when it came to Bauxite, bauxite workers and bauxite communities.  Further, join the demand for similar, equitable treatment  for  all sugar workers, who are no more nor no less Guyanese than bauxite workers and whose communities are just as much Guyanese communities.  Prompt payment of severance is not haemorrhaging of our nation but our law and the humane and fair thing to do.  The PPP/C in much more difficult times, empathizing with bauxite workers losing  their jobs paid promptly twice what the law required. So, today we support the call for RUSAL workers to be treated similarly and with no question, no hesitation,  we call for similar equitable treatment  for  sugar workers and sugar communities.

We appreciate the acknowledgement of Mr Lincoln Lewis of the generous severance payment of the PPP/C administration to bauxite workers.  We expect the support of Mr Lincoln Lewis in our struggle for similar treatment  for  sugar workers. What is good for bauxite workers must be good for sugar workers also.

Yours faithfully,

Samuel A.A. Hinds

Former Minister Responsible for Mines and

Minerals including Bauxite

Former Prime Minister and Former President