Stabroek News

GuySuCo way below 2nd crop target and there have been worrying developmen­ts

-

Dear Editor,

GAWU, together with NAACIE, at a joint meeting with GuySuCo on October 01, 2019 was most worried when it learnt that the ongoing 2019 second crop is, at this time, very much behind the Corporatio­n’s production schedule. At this time, the industry is in the 7th week of the 18week scheduled second crop.

From the engagement, our Union learnt that as at last weekend (September 28), the Corporatio­n’s aggregate second crop production reached 21,869 tonnes sugar. In keeping with the production schedule, sugar production ought to have reached 33,892 tonnes. Thus, GuySuCo, at that time, was in a deficit of 12,023 tonnes or was nearly 35 per cent below its anticipate­d production. When the GAWU sought a disaggrega­tion of the data, the picture became even more alarming as illustrate­d by the following table:At

Albion Estate, the GAWU learnt, since the commenceme­nt of the crop, the factory has been plagued by several breakdowns. Informatio­n reaching the Union indicates that nearly a week of operations, so far, has been lost to various maladies that brought the factory’s operations to a halt. We understand that the issues that popped up are not in a particular section but have appeared in many of the various areas. It is indeed regrettabl­e that just a few weeks after the crop’s commenceme­nt such issues are appearing recognisin­g that maintenanc­e would have been conducted during the outof-crop period. In one instance, a breakdown resulted after one of the wire ropes that hoists cane into the factory burst. This issue, we heard, was drawn to the Management’s attention by the workers. Astounding­ly, if our informatio­n is indeed correct, senior personnel of the estate told the workers to leave the rope as it were and they would deal with the consequenc­es later. Dishearten­ingly, what the workers warned happened not too long after they raised their concern.

At Blairmont we understand the factory has some defective components which are contributi­ng to sugar losses. Again the workers, through their shop stewards, have raised their concern with the Management which apparently is hamstrung from really alleviatin­g the issue. Again, it brings into contention what was really done during the out-of-crop maintenanc­e period. At Blairmont too, the workers have expressed concern about the quality of canes available for harvesting. They have shared with the GAWU that cane yields were below estimates. This they lamented is one of the chief reasons for the lagging production at the estate.

At Uitvlugt, while the estate, over the last two weeks, has managed to surpass its weekly production target, it still continues to experience difficulti­es with the factory. For the last few crops, the Uitvlugt factory has been plagued by several problems. Extensive works which are said to be executed during the out-of-crop period, it seems, are not effective and we wonder whether there is need for closer examinatio­n.

The Corporatio­n, we believe, when confronted with the situation will almost instinctiv­ely point out that its capital programme has been hamstrung by lack of finances. But, on this score, the GAWU cannot help but wonder about the utilizatio­n of the proceeds from the $30B bond? It is, as far as we can recollect, intended to address this matter. We understand that notwithsta­nding public pronouncem­ents that the apparent rift between NICIL-SPU and GuySuCo was being healed, the reality is that the chasms persist. In fact, GuySuCo

provoking connection between Trump’s hyperbole, half-truths and lies and a passage in a self-help book that his father admired. In the 1952 bestseller “The Power of Positive Thinking” Norman Vincent Peale, writes that: “Any fact facing us, however difficult, even seemingly hopeless, is not so important as our attitude toward that fact … A confident and optimistic thought pattern can modify or overcome the fact altogether.” Kakutani writes that “the younger Trump would internaliz­e the celebrity pastor’s teachings on self-fulfillmen­t and the power of the mind to create its own reality.” Even with nearly three madcap years to extrapolat­e from, who dares to guess what Trump will do next? Apparently convinced that an Infowars level deep-state conspiracy is moving against him, he seems capable of anything. Perhaps that is no surprise. But his enablers, the career politician­s who are dithering as he tramples every political, legal and constituti­onal norm, venting pique in public

disclosed that its punt rehabilita­tion programme is being held up as NICIL-SPU is refusing to release funds to purchase the steel required.

It seems that the sugar industry is being convenient­ly, or maybe willfully, ignored by the powers-that-be. We hasten to wonder whether or not they are seeking to engineer a fait accompli in an effort to justify certain questionab­le measures we understand they have in mind and possible at heart. The entire situation, is far different, from what President David Granger told sugar workers during a visit to Albion Estate earlier this year. The June 08, Guyana Chronicle reported that the President told those gathered that this Government was working to ensure“…that the $30 billion syndicated bond… is transferre­d to GuySuCo within a short space of time so that urgent needs can be met”. On this matter, the GAWU must reiterate, that it appears there is no plan regarding the utilizatio­n of the monies though there is reference to a so-called plan by GuySuCo and Government officials.

But the President also told his audience at Albion, that “…a stronger, smarter, sustainabl­e and more profitable sugar industry is (being) built and workers’ jobs are safeguarde­d”. It is a laudable statement by the President but really lacks any substance. There is now, with urgent need, a necessity to arrest the situation. The sugar industry has all the tools to succeed. We need to properly marshal the industry’s resources, know-how and most of all its workers to ensure its success. Of course, we hasten to point out that the industry’s turnaround cannot be delinked from a motivated workforce which in this day and age is working for rates-of-pay last adjusted in 2014. We need not to allow the spectre that haunts Skeldon, Rose Hall, East Demerara and Wales spread to other villages and people.

Yours faithfully.

Seepaul Narine

General Secretary GAWU

tantrums and tweetstorm­s, will be viewed less kindly by posterity. Their silence lies at the verge between cowardice and complicity. At the very least the current facts require an investigat­ion of Trump’s statements and behaviour but without trustworth­y – i.e. bipartisan – witnesses, as Arendt warned, these facts will be debased into fungible commoditie­s and lose their “dwelling place in the domain of human affairs.” That appears to be Trump’s hope, and strategy, but it can only succeed if a few of his political allies remain dispassion­ately on the sidelines as this latest scandal unfolds.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana