Trinidad-labor-union leader defends breaking ranks and accepting a four percent wage offer.

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Amalgamated Workers Union president Michael Prentice signs the collective bargaining agreement at the CPO's office (Photo courtesy of CPO)

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad– President of the Amalgamated Workers Union (AMU),  Michael Prentice, says he has been described as a “Judas” and a leading member of the ruling People’s National Movement (PNM) after the union accepted a four percent wage increase offer from the Trinidad and Tobago government.

“We did not get up one morning and wave a magic wand and get a position,” said Prentice, adding, “yes, we have accepted the four percent.”

A statement from the office of the Chief Personnel Officer (CPO) late Monday said that the collective agreement had been signed for the periods 2014-2016 and 2017-2019.

The two parties have agreed, among other matters a new job-evaluation exercise for workers, the alignment of rates of premiums and allowances enjoyed by other daily-rated workers and an increase of those rates, an increase in the rate of Cost of Living Allowance (COLA), the provision of technical and vocational training, and a one-time buyout for retirees in 2014 and 2015 at TT$4,000 (One TT dollar=US$0.16 cents) per retiree.

But the decision by the AWU to accept the four percent wage offer comes against the backdrop of the Joint Trade Union Movement (JTUM) and its members to reject the bid while staging street protests in support of a higher figure.

Apart from the JTUM, the Police Service Social and Welfare Association (PSSWA), the Prison Officers’ Association (POA), and the Public Services Association (PSA) are among the trade unions which have rejected the CPO’s four percent offer.

Prentice, speaking on a radio station here, said that following his decision to sign on behalf of his union, whose membership includes funeral attendants and drivers, cooks and counter-staff at least one fast-food outlet, as well as clerks and cleaners at malls in the capital, said he expects other trade unions to follow his lead.

“We were not the first, and we will not be the last, and the pushback has already started…and I am not afraid to go public and say precisely what occurred. I was asked for an emergency meeting (of the trade unions) …and all the interest at that meeting was …did you sign or not, and I said yes, comrades, I signed.

“They tried to raise inducements, they tried to raise and say negative things, some people disrespected the halls of the trade union office, I listened, I allowed them, and they finally got up and leave,” he said, telling radio listeners that his union is prepared to stand alone,” he said, noting that during the meeting with the trade unions at which the JTUM president Ancel Roget was present, he was referred to as a “Judas” and a general council member of the ruling PNM.

“This is not the first time we have been alone, and maybe for a long time, we will be alone again. At the end of the day, we represent workers in an industry that is very, very thankless; it has no gratitude and appreciation….

“Somebody has to take an interest in these workers who are continually being neglected, ignored, and bypassed, ‘Prentice said, adding that “imagine in the 21-century high profile people are scoffing at the fact that the trade union took a decision to do something in the interest of education and technical training, and still people scoffed at that yesterday.

Prentice said that his union has put on the negotiating table proposals for the period 2020-22 “since we felt we would not allow the opportunity to go by without doing what is in the membership’s best interest by taking this proactive approach.

“We simply cannot continue as trade unionists; we pick up our marbles and go when things don’t go our way…if that was in 1937, we must remember what happened in 1937, but we must not live in 1937, and a lot of my colleagues seem to be ignoring the fact that we are in 2022….”

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