Jamaica Gleaner

Thwaites and Charles Sr have an idea

- Rev Ronald G. Thwaites is an attorney-at-law. Send feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com.

HON PEARNEL Charles Sr and myself are unlikely collaborat­ors, given the poisonous divisions of Jamaican politics and society. He is a rockstone Labourite (who, had there ever been a really honest public poll, would have been party leader); me, a left-of-centre People’s National Party member. He, a peasant-bred black man whose only whiteness is half his hairstyle; me a white, middleclas­s Jamaican. Elder Charles, a lifelong Adventist; me, a Catholic deacon.

Most of all, I admire t he gentleman’s lack of bitterness, given his long detention without charge int he1970s.I have apologised to him for having supported the measure at the time. No one should have their liberty taken away without charge – not then, not now.

Despite all our ascriptive difference­s, we share a passion for this nation and an optimism about its prospects, qualified by the disappoint­ment about the inadequacy of the political culture in which we both, he for longer than I, have been immersed for decades.

For the past six months, Pearnel and I have been sharing the microphone, beaming mostly to the Jamaican diaspora, on Bridge 99 FM, with connection­s to an increasing number of foreign radio stations.

Mostly we get on well, despite furious arguments, because mutual respect, the shared nationalis­t cause, and the value of experience and satiated ambition conquer most disagreeme­nts. At base, we agree on the nobility of political engagement and the futility of the tribalism of our Independen­ce experience.

Now we have a proposal to put to all of us.

By conservati­ve estimation, there are well over 100,000 unemployed, underemplo­yed and underskill­ed young people in Jamaica. Thousands can‘t even meet the modest HEART/NSTA Trust entrance standards.

We all know the causes and consequenc­es of this condition. Recently, it has been disclosed that there is a shortage of skilled constructi­on and hospitalit­y workers. The same goes for all trades. And there is huge opportunit­y for competent Jamaican labour abroad.

Match this demand with an ineffectiv­e scheme of training, whereby we keep young people for expensive years in classrooms when their best skill training and values reorientat­ion would be achieved on a worksite, where they are labouring under supervisio­n, earning a stipend, forging positive identity and self-esteem, and pursuing a path towards certificat­ion and upward mobility.

REVIVE APPRENTICE­SHIP PROGRAMME

Why not revive a sturdy, scaled-up apprentice­ship programme? There is no good reason why that practice has become almost obsolete. Put idle youth to work, clothe them with the dignity of the hard hat and boots of uniform, place a soldier and a social worker on each site and watch skills improve, attitudes change and discipline increase. Separate the majority who want opportunit­y from those few who are disturbed or malevolent, and refashion public health, education and national security policies accordingl­y.

Return the three per cent employers’ contributi­on to HEART/ NSTA Trust to industry, commerce and agricultur­e as the incentive for training. Task the training agency with supervisio­n, verificati­on and certificat­ion. Ask our internatio­nal partners to send specialist­s, not to displace local labour, but to teach and instruct according to internatio­nal standards.

Offer the trainees a stipend, not for just turning up, but for doing measurable, productive tasks. If HEART/NSTA Trust needs more money for monitoring, please take it from the national security budget or even charge us one more per cent on the HEART/NSTA Trust tax. Yes, we say that because every trained Jamaican is a living antidote to the criminal culture and a contributo­r to the flourishin­g of family and society.

Last week, Pearnel and I tried out the idea on the President of the Incorporat­ed Masterbuil­ders Associatio­n of Jamaica. He was receptive and indicated that a proposal along these lines had been sent repeatedly to the Government. No response has been forthcomin­g. Why?

We were told that often, the illiterate guy who is engaged on a constructi­on gig comes to understand the importance of reading, numeracy and other formal skills, and becomes disposed to learn them while working. What could be more virtuous?

Question: Would the business class, both large and small, be disposed to partnering with the State and the people in such salvific activity?

TRAINING AND WORK

Mr Government! Charles and Thwaites are asking you to use training and work, rather than, or, as Sir P would want me to write, alongside containmen­t and repression? And we are not talking about any ‘dibby-dibby’ small-number programme like we have now. The big idea being put forward is an ambitious Lee Kuan Yew and Fidel Castro-style mobilisati­on for skilling and upskilling our people.

We expect that Professor Wint, HEART/NSTA Trust and the wellendowe­d private sector will consider, amend and execute this venture now. No one should ‘graduate’into idleness next month from grades 11 or 13, or any other training institutio­n. Start there.

We have the need, we have the talent, and we have the money. There is nothing untried, but everything urgent, about the plan. What’s missing is the energy and the political will.

Remember the slogan of the 1970s: ‘Free up private enterprise and watch Jamaica grow’. That hasn’t worked well enough. How about one which says, ‘Free up the youth with skills and work and watch Jamaica become safe and prosperous’?

 ?? ?? Ronald Thwaites
Ronald Thwaites
 ?? FILE ?? Pearnel Charles Sr
FILE Pearnel Charles Sr

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica