Jamaica Gleaner

TTFA staff call for end to bank accounts battle

Workers have not received salaries since February

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PORT-OF-SPAIN, TRINIDAD (CMC): STAFF OF the Trinidad and Tobago Football Associatio­n (TTFA) who have not received salaries since February are pleading with deposed president William Wallace to end his battle for control of the organisati­on’s bank accounts, which they say is standing in the way of them being paid.

In a letter written to Wallace, in which they pointed out they have not been paid for March or April, they urged the embattled football boss to look at the “human side” of their plight.

“There now exists an urgent and stressful situation that has been thrust upon the staff due to the non-payment of salaries for a second consecutiv­e month,” they wrote.

Wallace is battling a normalisat­ion committee set up by football’s world governing body FIFA to run the affairs of the beleaguere­d TTFA for control of the associatio­n’s bank accounts at First Citizens Bank here.

‘There now exists an urgent and stressful situation that has been thrust upon the staff due to the non-payment of salaries for a second consecutiv­e month.’

THREATENIN­G LEGAL ACTION

The associatio­n is threatenin­g legal action if it is not granted access to the accounts. However, the bank has refused both the TTFA and the normalisat­ion committee led by local businessma­n Robert Hadad, saying that only a ruling by the court or other resolution would alter its position.

In their May 2 letter, the TTFA’s employees who were last paid from borrowed monies at the end of the February lamented being caught in the middle of that battle.

They noted that it was the beginning of a third month that administra­tive staff had not received salaries, and some technical staff members had not been paid for as long as six months.

“If control of the TTFA accounts is taken before the courts to be settled, staff members will have to endure extreme hardship because of the extended time we will have to go without a means to be paid. Members of staff have already begun to get calls from creditors,” the unsigned letter stated, noting that some members of staff are their households’ sole breadwinne­rs.

The workers, who were sent home since March 15 when the TTFA closed its office because of the COVID-19 pandemic, added that full-time staff are currently employed and do not qualify for any of the Government’s assistance programmes. Additional­ly, they said, members of staff have also been refused assistance through the National Insurance Scheme (NIS) because of non-payment of statutory deductions.

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