Stabroek News

Hundreds more sugar workers to be laid off

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Several hundred more sugar workers are expected to be laid off from the Skeldon, Rose Hall, and East Demerara estates by next month and the Guyana Agricultur­al and General Workers Union (GAWU) yesterday urged that the decision be reviewed.

The impending redundanci­es were announced by GAWU, which said that it was informed by the Guyana Sugar Corporatio­n (GuySuCo), which sent home 4,763 workers at the end of last year.

“These workers were mainly retained as the sugar company was seeking to provide certain services to the National Drainage and Irrigation Authority (NDIA). Dismayingl­y, that arrangemen­t has fallen through and the workers are the hapless victims,” the union said in a statement that was issued yesterday.

It added that the further expansion of the unemployed in the sugar belt is undoubtedl­y making a really bad situation even worse. “Given the absence of any plans to deal with the fallout from the miniaturis­ation of the industry and the fiasco that has surrounded the workers severance payment, this furthering retrenchme­nt is heart-rending to say the least,” it added.

The union, which said the process of informing the identified workers would begin sometime soon, with their redundancy becoming effective not too long from now, did not cite a specific number of workers who would be affected.

When contacted yesterday, GuySuCo spokeswoma­n Audreyanna Thomas said she could only confirm that additional workers were going to be laid off. Thomas added that GuySuCo was still in the process of finalising the list of workers and could not give any more definitive informatio­n on the situation, including when the workers are expected to complete their last day as employees of the sugar company.

However, a source close to the corporatio­n related to Stabroek News that from the informatio­n he was made privy to, the figure stands around 500 and could even climb higher.

When questioned about the figures, Thomas emphasised that she couldn’t state but indicated that there are over 900 employees remaining at the three estates.

The GAWU statement added that from

what has been happening, it appears as if GuySuCo and the government are not prepared and “clearly incapable” of dealing with the consequenc­es that have stemmed from “these callous decisions they made.”

The union added that it is still not too late to reverse the decisions and re-open the estates, given the situation that is currently unraveling with the workers.

“We call on the Government as President David Granger reportedly said recently, to ‘put people before profits.’ The GAWU believes that rather than displacing the workers, the NDIA could utilise the workers services and accordingl­y compensate GuySuCo,” GAWU said.

“The Government needs to be constantly reminded, it would seem, of its responsibi­lity to all its citizens, to safeguard their interests and to enhance their living standards along to the road to that promised ‘Good Life’. The treatment of thousands of workers in the sugar industry is certainly contrary to such a universall­y accepted practice,” it added.

Last year, with December 31st, 2017 being their last working day, more than 4,000 workers rang in the New Year without jobs. However, despite being owed severance pay, a large majority of the workers had not received their monies, with Minister of Agricultur­e Noel Holder stating that they would be paid by the end of January

Last Friday, a supplement­ary allocation of $1.93 billion was approved to assist with the payment of severance to workers who were laid off at the end of last year.

Some 1,600 workers who are entitled to severance payouts of $500,000 or less are expected to be paid by the end of this month, while the remainder will receive 50% of their severance as previously promised by the APNU+AFC government. A total of $2.431 billion is set to be paid by January 31st, with an additional $2 billion set to be paid by December 31st.

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