Stabroek News

GuySuCo and government need to work out a compensati­on scheme for laid-off sugar workers

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Dear Editor, After reading my own letter published in your column on December 6, within the context of the unfolding news of sugar workers being sent home, I could not stop tears coming to my eyes as I remembered my own sojourn with unemployme­nt in Guyana for about three years after I left the central bank. My sympathies rest with the sugar workers as I know and understand the difficulti­es they and their families might be facing. We only keep reading about these sugar workers being sent home, but we are not hearing anything about any financial arrangemen­ts to provide support for them and their families for the next year or so at the very least.

If we roughly estimate that every sugar worker supports a family, by my best guess, in excess of 3,000 families have been affected by these lay-offs since the coalition took office. Again, if one assumes at least one child per family, at least 3,000 children’s lives have been upset by these lay-offs. I submit that this is unconscion­able, and cannot be condoned under any circumstan­ce.

I and a number of individual­s have already submitted proposals for a national unemployme­nt insurance benefits scheme. Although implementi­ng this to address sugar workers’ immediate problems might be impractica­l, I strongly suggest that before GuySuCo lays off any more workers, its management and government should sit down to work out an appropriat­e compensati­on scheme as an immediate interim measure, if this is not already being done. Considerat­ion should be made of the fact that sugar workers have been financiall­y exploited over the decades. Financial provision should be made for at least one year, and I would like to propose a monthly financial package of at least $90,000 for a family of four. This should apply to all sugar workers released by GuySuCo since 2015, at the very least.

Finally, the corporatio­n and government should establish a committee aimed at addressing sugar workers’ long term welfare immediatel­y, if this is not already done. It is unthinkabl­e and unconscion­able for any government, or any company, to release a single worker without some financial provision for his welfare needs in the near term. This is especially so at this time of year when we normally reach out a bit more to each other.

Yours faithfully, Craig Sylvester

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