Stabroek News

Barama factory manager Patricia Griffith-Mingo is at the top of her game

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It would probably take a great deal of persuasion, even in an era when there are far fewer workplace gender barriers than had been the case a decade or two ago, to cause one to believe that a modern plywood manufactur­ing company, the largest such enterprise in the Caribbean, has placed its operating reins in the hands of a woman.

This, as it happens, is the case at Barama Company Limited’s Land of Canaan operations, a company that has its roots in that widespread Asian reputation for an uncompromi­singly rigorous work ethic. These days, the now admittedly much-transforme­d company, has placed its faith largely in the hands of a Guyanese woman who has been quietly and unfussily delivering to high standards.

Patricia Mingo-Griffith is directly answerable for both the volumes and quality of the Barama product. The local and regional history of management in the

productive sectors may not fit in with this particular gender preference and yet this is what obtains at Barama.

Once you engage Patricia you quickly dispel such notions as you might have fashioned that her position as Barama’s factory manager is some kind of sinecure contrivanc­e, designed to fit in with the dictates of gender balance. Her credential­s from her more than twenty five years of service at the company, some of them through demandingl­y difficult years, have been built on hard graft, relentless commitment and, she says, a preparedne­ss over time to prove herself in management positions that were otherwise dominated by men. These qualities have made her a critical cog in the Barama wheel. She has thrived in the various capacities that she has served specifical­ly because she has ‘earned her corn,’ her continual preferment deriving from the value she has continuall­y added to the company.

Campbellvi­lle Secondary School, the Government Technical Institute, and the University of Guyana, are the three formal learning institutio­ns that shaped Patricia’s profession­al path. Setting aside her studies in a range of areas including carpentry, joinery and draftsmans­hip, she has ‘worked’ the day shifts and the night shifts on the factory floor alongside convention­al gender-sensitive male colleagues. When the time came she transforme­d camaraderi­e into leadership-driven relationsh­ips that got the best out of her colleagues, simultaneo­usly enhancing her status as a leader.

Long before she began to sit in the company boardroom she had already been aware of its absence of gender balance (private sector boardrooms in Guyana are, to this day, still overwhelmi­ngly gender-imbalanced) though it seemed at an even earlier stage that she was preparing to break through the glass ceiling. She had already been amongst some of the earliest Guyanese employees at the then wholly Malaysian-owned company and had to push aside a language barrier which, she concedes, she found it difficult to surmount, in order to learn as much as she could from the focussed Malaysians about plywood production.

Even in the telephone interview, a necessary stricture that is now part of the arsenal of measures used to combat the novel coronaviru­s, you do not fail to detect the zone of confidence in which Patricia now dwells. Not least amongst the prized possession­s wrested from her tenure at Barama is the company-wide acceptance of the practical value that she adds to the viability of Barama as well as the gender-blind respect that she has gained from her male colleague managers as a woman who, in every respect, is ‘at the top of her game.’

As the Senior Manager responsibl­e for the revenueear­ning nerve centre of the company, Patricia is answerable directly to the Chief Executive Officer. Below her are two senior supervisor­s and an array of other individual­s in key supervisor­y positions; men, and women, none of whom are unmindful of the ‘Iron Lady’ reputation that she has earned for her unswerving commitment to high standards.

It is a tribute to the company’s appreciati­on of the ‘people skills’ that she had acquired from her tenure in the factory that she was asked to serve as Human Resources Manager in a company that has not been without its industrial relations challenges. Shifts of this nature have meant that Patricia has had to continuall­y re-invent herself, making sweeping transforma­tions from the job-specific factory attire of overalls that make few if any concession­s to gender, to high heels and hairdos. What has made these transforma­tions both challengin­g and rewarding, she says, is the fact that long before her first assignment as Human Resources Manager hit her desk, she had already learnt much coping with the shop floor at Barama.

Substantiv­ely, the job of Human Resources Manager, she says, has made her more acutely aware of the importance of that mix of sensitivit­y and firmness necessary to ensure that employee attitudes and aptitudes fit in with the focus of the company. In the production stream she has long learned to ‘know her plywood,’ to become intimate with the technical underpinni­ngs of the production process; and if, on the factory floor, there may, perhaps, be the ever present likelihood that male counterpar­ts might be inclined to ‘try her’ for mettle and stamina, that does not faze her in the least. Simply put, Patricia appears to be entirely on top of her game.

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Patricia Griffith -Mingo

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