by Akash Samaroo
Public Services Association (PSA) President Felisha Thomas is again accusing the Chief Personnel Officer (CPO) of stalling the “10 per cent” wage negotiations and is now asking if he has been given a mandate to block public servants from getting their backpay by Christmas.
In a video posted to social media on Tuesday evening titled, “Who is standing in the way of your backpay before Christmas? The Chief Personnel Obstructionist”, Thomas revealed she has been invited to meet on November 21.
However she informed her members that the meeting is not to commence negotiations.
“It was an invitation to a presentation on the state of the economy. Needless to say, comrades, you are aware, I am aware of the state of the economy and I don't understand why the CPO's office is behaving as though we are now commencing negotiations,” Thomas lamented.
The PSA President said in their view, negotiations began in April 2022 and a state of the economy was presented then. Now she said the PSA wants to focus on the 10 percent offer which the Finance Minister directed CPO Commander Dr Daryl Dindial to put on the bargaining table.
She urged Commander Dindial to stop delaying the process, noting he already received his 47% salary increase under the former government’s acceptance of the Salary Review Commission’s recommendations.
“What is the issue? What is the problem that all of you have with ensuring that public officers are well taken care of? You want to take care yourselves but forget about public officers. The very same public officers that you rely on, you are delaying.
“For what reason? I don't know. Maybe you have some mandates that workers are not aware of. Maybe your mandate is not to let public officers get the money by Christmas.”
Thomas told the CPO to forget about the presentation and commence the negotiations at 10% and “nothing else.”
Last week Commander Dindial explained to Guardian Media that the presentation of a “Brief” which is the status of the economy prepared by the Finance Ministry is the first step in the negotiating process.
