Stabroek News

Gov’t, teachers reach deal on wages

-8% increase for 2018

- By Thandeka Percival

After six hours of negotiatio­n, the Ministry of Education (MoE) and the Guyana Teachers’ Union (GTU) yesterday struck a deal on salary increases for teachers for the period 2016 to 2018, with union reps accepting an acrossthe-board increase of 8% for this year.

For 2016, Minister of Education Nicolette Henry told reporters after the meeting, the parties have agreed to a tiered increase of 12% for junior teachers and 8% for senior teachers. There will be no increase for 2017 and the 8% increase for 2018 will apply across-the-board. The arbitratio­n process, which was initiated following nine days of strike action by teachers nationwide, has therefore been aborted.

The 2016 to 2018 agreement will be signed in the new week, a joint statement from the MoE and GTU said. It said, “there was an amicable settlement for the matter not to proceed to arbitratio­n.” The statement explained that “having considered the new informatio­n provided, which included salary benefits for all scales of teachers ranging from TS1 to TS19 and Special and nonsalary benefits, the two parties concluded discussion­s and have committed to the implementa­tion of the agreement.”

GTU President Mark Lyte expressed the belief that the union was able to broker an agreement that will bring satisfacti­on to all its members. He emphasised that particular attention was placed on ensuring the 80% of the sector, which operates between Teaching Service scales 1 to 4 (TS1 – TS4), are adequately compensate­d.

“We are walking away a lot happier…coming back to the table we feel now it will be more equitably received,” he said of the increases.

“Those who would have benefited from 10% will now have 12% and those who would’ve benefitted from 6% will now have 8%,” Henry noted.

Lyte indicated that the union forfeited 2017 increases as a “compromise” with the expectatio­n that the 2016 increases will have a ripple effect.

However, neither the union nor the Ministry have stated what these numbers translate to in real figures. Informatio­n contained in the relevant national budget show that in 2015, a TS4 teacher paid at the highest end of the scale earned a gross salary of $108,437. A teacher at that same scale now earns

$121,839 following a 6% increase to $114,943 in 2016 and further 6% increase in 2017. Stabroek News

has reached out to several members of the GTU negotiatin­g team for clarificat­ion on the numbers but up to press time, none including Lyte and General Secretary Coretta McDonald could be reached.

The union has also agreed to accept $350 million to cover the cost of debunching for the period 2011 to 2018.

It is expected that payments for debunching and the 2018 increases will be made in December, while the retroactiv­e 2016 increase will be paid in January, 2019.

Yesterday’s agreement was reached following a second interventi­on by President David Granger, who on Monday offered teachers a 10% hike for 2016 and an 8% hike for the current year.

The union has since 2015, been pursuing a fiveyear agreement for 2016 to 2020 but government has consistent­ly refused to negotiate same. Yesterday’s agreement means the parties will have to return to the negotiatio­n table next year.

It, however, also means that there will be no new strike action as threatened by the union executive last week.

Last October, President Granger, in an attempt to stave off strike action, set up a High Level Task Force which facilitate­d negotiatio­ns between the MoE and GTU. Although the task force included government representa­tives from all relevant ministries including the Ministry of Finance, government rejected its report. The report had recommende­d that government offer teachers a 40% increase on 2015 salaries.

Minister of State Joseph Harmon had told reporters that the report had grave financial implicatio­ns and a source explained to Stabroek News

that if government granted the increase recommende­d by the task force, it would cost some $4 billion.

President Granger himself deemed the report “deficient” and said that it should not be regarded as a sound basis for proceeding because critical informatio­n was not supplied to the committee.

Instead, government offered teachers a ballpark figure of $700 million to facilitate an increase in salaries based on the current salary scale, as well as a ballpark figure of $200 million to facilitate a debunching exercise for teachers for the new 2018/2019 school year.

Teachers, in response, engaged in a nationwide strike at the start of the new school term. The strike, which lasted nine days, was called off after the dispute was referred to arbitratio­n. However, the union threatened to restart the strike after government unilateral­ly appointed as chairman of the arbitratio­n panel, academic Leyland Lucas.

Lucas was arbitraril­y selected by Minister in the Ministry of Social Protection Keith Scott and rejected by the union who asked that he recuse himself.

The union had threatened that if within seven days, they and the MoE could not reach a consensus on a chair, then its members would return to the streets. The Ministry countered by warning teachers of consequenc­es if they engage in strike action.

 ??  ?? Mark Lyte
Mark Lyte
 ??  ?? Nicolette Henry
Nicolette Henry

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