Stabroek News

Scotia Guyana staff have all been sold out into uncertaint­y

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Dear Editor, Scotiabank, the community bank, the indigenous bank, the family bank, the corporate and socially responsibl­e bank. Scotiabank, the employer of choice, the bank where staff are the greatest asset. This is what staff had been brainwashe­d into believing over the years, they have come to realize that they are basically business statistics.

A few years ago Scotia Guyana started to report to Scotia Trinidad. From there everything changed. The compassion­ate Guyanese Country Manager (Amanda St. Aubyn) was forced out, and a Trinidadia­n Country Manager (Raymond Smith) was installed. The staff soon realized this was not only a Micro Manager but also a man whose mission seemed aimed at depleting valuable resources.

Staff benefits in Scotia Guyana were being turned off, while Scotia Trinidad staff continued to enjoy theirs. Jobs were being lost in Scotia Guyana and transferre­d to Scotia Trinidad with some exorbitant consultanc­y and support fees paid to Scotia Trinidad. This increased Scotia Guyana’s expenses, but staff were made to feel that they were the ones wasting money and overspendi­ng, which resulted in more and more benefits being turned off in Scotia Guyana.

Guyana Managers were systematic­ally forced out of the system, while other jobs became redundant and were transferre­d to Scotia Trinidad. An entire support unit was transferre­d to Scotia Trinidad which impacted customer service, but the Trinidadia­n Country Manager didn’t care because jobs were being created in Trinidad. The resident Human Resource personnel (one) over recent years amounted to nothing more than an Executive Clerk, or a rubber stamp.

Needless to say, this Trinidadia­n Country Manager could not do this on his own. He was assisted by some Guyanese seniors within the system who believed they, too, would be safe. Well, well, well! The Scotia Guyana staff have all been sold out into uncertaint­y. No consider- ation to situation, circumstan­ces, or choices. No severance, or pension payouts, no guarantees of proper and equal placement at the new employer. No! It’s just business! Scotia Guyana is not unionized, and the Government Ministry will not intervene in the protection of staff the way they have intervened in the competitiv­e, regulatory and big business challenges to this deal. The Scotia Guyana employees do not have a problem with Republic Bank, they have an issue with the way they have been treated by the Scotiabank conglomera­te after 50 years of loyalty.

This is the 50th anniversar­y for Scotiabank in Guyana. Oh what a fitting celebratio­n! Yours faithfully, Carlos Prowell Former Branch Manager Scotiabank Bartica Branch

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