Stabroek News

GuySuCo must re-establish much needed capacity to deliver range of education and developmen­tal programmes

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Dear Editor,

Ever since the earliest days in organisati­onal management, informed initially by attendance at Universiti­es, and other training interactio­ns, one kept searching for literature that focused on the management of agricultur­al entities, albeit within the limited accessibil­ity to books authored in Europe, the United Kingdom, and more often the USA. The primary reason was to find more relevant advice about how better to manage Guyana’s largest industry – sugar.

Though Caribbean Universiti­es taught relevant specialise­d courses there remained at the time this lacuna of recorded analyses of how to manage more efficientl­y the collective sugar producing entities known as the Sugar Associatio­n of the Caribbean (SAC).

One discovered almost a singular concentrat­ion on the management of manufactur­ing and services, with an exasperati­ng indifferen­ce to agricultur­e, probably because in more developed societies so much of it was rural and of personalis­ed ownership.

As it turned out in those early days in Bookers Sugar Estates, in the absence of a coordinate­d consensus of how best to manage to achieve targetted results, a generation of highly trained and motivated, Guyanese, more particular­ly, Personnel Officers, would meet, brainstorm, and eventually produce recommenda­tions regarding a range of operationa­l, social, human resources and community developmen­t issues, that earned ready approval by a then expatriate Board, as policies to be implemente­d for the benefit of the industry, much of which have stood the test of times – from the 1960s to now.

What we learnt then was that communicat­ion, involving strategic decisionma­king, could be acceptable from responsibl­e lower levels upwards to the highest decision-makers in organisati­on – so contrary to the imperious style adopted later by the various political directorat­es.

Personnel Officers constitute­d but a small component within the wide range of highly technicall­y equipped managers who were developed through the creative Bookers Cadet Scheme, including every specialist type of engineer and chemist; along with agricultur­alists, accountant­s, economists, sociologis­ts, community developmen­t officers – all comprehens­ively trained at various overseas universiti­es. (The list is not exhaustive). A high priority has since been given to Informatio­n & Communicat­ion Technology. A most strategic inclusion in this Human Resources Developmen­t was the institutio­n of the Apprentice Training Centre at Port Mourant, Berbice in 1957. It developed a track record of graduating talents who logically went on to university level, and in time became managers in factory and mechanical agricultur­e operations.

It was a Bookers Sugar Estates initiative which contribute­d quite substantia­l funding to the earliest agricultur­e programme at the University of Guyana. The Company also found it in their interest to invest heavily in the establishm­ent of the Guyana School of Agricultur­e.

One pauses to remark on the fantastic career of Bigyan Chandra, a clerk of Skeldon Estate, who started out by excelling at the Guyana School of Agricultur­e, soon after at the Imperial College of Tropical Agricultur­e; and maintained a level of performanc­e as an agricultur­alist, that the high ratings he achieved at the very discipline­d performanc­e evaluation system in those days, resulted in rapid promotions, eventually to the level of Agricultur­e Director in GuySuCo.

Of course there were other equally high-achievers who have since survived to boast of the inspiratio­nal management training workshops in which they participat­ed at the Corporatio­n’s Management Training Centre at Ogle – regrettabl­y abandoned to accommodat­e the pedestrian operations of a Head Office – first occupied by Booker Tate (no relation to the original Bookers) – then Management Consultant­s to the Administra­tion of the day.

For all of this century the industry has been subject to non-profession­al highlevel direction, which had the effect of too many hasty departures of managerial employees - during one period at the rate of about thirty annually. It is fair to say that there was a replacemen­t programme in the continuing award of cadetships and scholarshi­ps to the University of Guyana and the Guyana School of Agricultur­e. But too much institutio­nal memory had already been lost.

It is neverthele­ss important to emphasise, that in addition to the aging of relevant machinery and equipment in field and factory (in the latter connection the Skeldon Factory remains an elephantin­e puzzle), the most critical contributi­on to the industry must come from well trained human resources – at all the related levels. Positive motivation towards productivi­ty through team work is also key.

So that there will be need not only to revisit former successful management styles, but more critically to upgrade them in the light of this current pandemic environmen­t.

In this connection critics in particular should feel it fortunate that the Corporatio­n is still able to attract certain needed experience­d specialist skills, including principall­y in engineerin­g and agricultur­e.

But it remains absolutely necessary that the Corporatio­n re-establishe­s the much needed capacity to deliver a range of education and developmen­tal programmes to address current assessed managerial and technical needs, including at the highest decision-making levels.

So to finish where we started, it would be helpful to refer to appropriat­e management literature.

It was not pure coincidenc­e therefore that a small library of books on management was shared between GuySuCo’s Head Office at LBI, Demerara and Albion/PM Estate, Berbice, around 2017. It might well need updating.

Arguably however, the following sample may yet be relevant to all concerned, even in the new dispensati­on:

• Leading Change – John P. Kotter

• Lateral Thinking – Edward de

Bono

• Reinventin­g Organisati­ons –

Frédéric Laloux

• In Search of Excellence –

Thomas J. Peters and Robert H. Waterman

• Case method in Management Developmen­t – John Reynolds

• The Fifth Discipline – Peter M.

Senge

• A Developmen­t Programme for Women in Management – Mike Smith Obviously the climate change being experience­d will invite interest in more current management philosophi­es and practices.

It must always be borne in mind however, that it is not just a matter of revival, but more critically, the objective of survival of our sugar industry.

Yours faithfully,

E.B. John

Retired Human Resources Director GuySuCo

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