Stabroek News

Satisfied work force critical to strong business environmen­t, stable economy – Lewis

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A properly incentiviz­ed work force whose rights are respected and whose workplace security and material needs are being met is critical to a stable economy and to the prosperity of the nation as a whole, Guyana Trades Union Congress (GTUC) General Secretary Lincoln Lewis told Stabroek Business shortly after emerging from last week’s meeting of a trade union movement that continues to be fractured by divisions many of which have their origins in political difference­s.

“I suppose one can say that the meeting is in response to a growing recognitio­n by trades unions that a divided movement is an ineffectiv­e movement and that there is a critical role for a cohesive labour movement to play in strengthen­ing the country’s economy,” Lewis said.

What makes last week’s meeting significan­t is the fact that some of the unions that attended have, for one reason or another, been at loggerhead­s intermitte­ntly. The Guyana Labour Union (GLU) and the Guyana Agricultur­al and General Workers Union (GAWU) were among the members of the breakaway Federation of Independen­t Trade Unions of Guyana that attended last week’s GTUC meeting.

“We look around these days, in both the public and private sectors and there appears to be an assumption that economic developmen­t can take place without us being mindful of the condition of the labour force. In fact I sometimes ask myself whether that is the reason why workers’ concerns like wages and salaries, the working environmen­t, safety and health and other worker-related considerat­ions are overlooked,” he said.

In his comment, Lewis drew attention to the issues of concern raised by some of the unions that attended the meeting including the Guyana Bauxite and General Workers Union (GB&GWU), the Guyana Teachers Union (GTU), GAWU, the National Associatio­n of Agricultur­al, Commercial and Industrial Employees and the GLU. “What is significan­t is that all of these unions are speaking with one voice that arises out of their collective concern about worker-related issues. There are even some instances, like the case of the bauxite union, where the union’s concern has to do with infraction­s being committed at a workplace in which the state has an interest,” Lewis said.

While the GTUC General Secretary refused to be drawn on whether the recent meeting might be a precursor to subsequent initiative­s designed to reunite the labour movement he declared that observers need to “read the tea leaves.” According to Lewis, “The meeting of the unions at this time ought to send signals to those concerned that difference­s have not meant that we have lost our focus. What we as trade unionists understand is that a settled, stable and looked-after work force is one of the keys to the developmen­t of the successful economy that we talk about.”

Asked to comment on the near simultaneo­us outbursts by the GTU and the Guyana Public Service Union over what, so far, have been incomplete negotiatio­ns with the Government of Guyana, Lewis said that in the final analysis workers must be able to anticipate being paid at levels that will at least ensure that their critical needs are attended to. “The real question is whether what is on offer or what is being paid at this time is sufficient to attend to those needs. I am aware of a host on instances in which the paychecks of teachers and public servants are being subsidized by family and friends,” Lewis said.

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 ??  ?? (GTUC) General Secretary Lincoln Lewis
(GTUC) General Secretary Lincoln Lewis

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