14 Percent Salary Increase for Public Servants an Illusion

Recently public servants gained a 14 percent salary increase; however, as citizens of this country, they still suffer from 100 percent neglect by our respective governments.

The timing of this agreement, in my opinion, is meant to gain psychological leverage by mitigating the distrust and frustration felt by voters heading into the upcoming general election.

Public servants may see this as a victory, but I don’t think it should be viewed this way.

A 14, 20, 30 or a 50 percent increase will never address the real issues we have been clamoring about for years and which no government has ever addressed.

Participants in the On the Job Training Programme (OJT) consistently face problems trying to get their stipends.

Our country’s penal system is atrocious.

Car owners pay ridiculously high insurance premiums.

Food and transportation costs increase regularly.

Many of our citizens still do not get a reliable water supply.

Our healthcare system is abominable. With the rising cost of healthcare how much of public servant’s retirement benefits will be spent on medication and care.

Traffic is becoming more frustrating.

For many public servants spending hours getting to and from work is normal.

We face higher and higher rent prices without the benefit of a logical system of price assessment.

Our “Justice System” is a sham: Where is Calder Hart? Whatever happened to the “Piarco Airport Authority Scandal”?

Poor working conditions still exist for many public servants, despite the increase.

In my view, this administration and previous governments don’t mind providing the appearance of support for public servants, so long as they can preside over the treasury.

In fact, a 14 percent increase is negligible, when the bigger picture is taken into consideration – these politicians still control the destiny of our country.

Land prices are beyond the reach of many.

Some of these same public servants may never own their own home, and neither will their children.

School books and the cost of a “descent” education continue to rise.

Many parents still underwrite a significant portion of their children’s education, despite schools, supposedly, being government funded.

Will your children be able to find the jobs they have studied hard for so they can have a stake in their own country?

Citizens who have not contributed significantly, in any way, to our National Insurance plan receive just as much in pension benefits as public servants who have paid into this system for most of, if not all, their working lives.

Will this (NIS) plan still be solvent in the years to come, considering the problems many retirees have trying to get their benefits?

Will this government or the other option at the polls re-introduce property taxes to negate the increase?

These are just some of the issues we have been facing for decades.

Think about your future. Think about your children’s future. Think! Period!

I urge public servants and citizens of this country to look at the bigger picture. Where will your children live? Will you be able to pay for them to get a “good” education? Will you and your children be able to retire comfortably?

With declining oil revenue, it is becoming more and more difficult for our country to meet its financial obligations, especially salaries.

With the increase in borrowing by this administration, we have a greater debt burden; therefore, the smiles of public servants now are, again, in my humble opinion, only temporary and an illusion.

I predict public servants should be prepared to see their numbers significantly reduced in the not too distant future.

Posted in Today's Message | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Why No Walkover for Sea Lots Community?

memorial for mother and two daughters
A picture memorial at Sea Lots along the highway marks the site where a mother and her two daughters were struck and killed by a car driven by an off-duty police officer.

February 24, 2015 marked the second anniversary of the tragic road accident which claimed the lives of Akasha Paul, 7, her sister Shakira, 8 and their mother Haydee, 28 when an off-duty police officer ploughed his car into six pedestrians in the vicinity of Sea Lots.

Among those seriously injured in the accident were Abigail Assing, 31, Ryan Rampersad, 20 and Amanda Lalla, 50.

Since this tragedy, the government has constructed what they call, a safety zone, which, in part, consists of a barricade aimed at protecting pedestrians from cars which may inadvertently careen into the sidewalk from the highway.

Sea Lots residents remember victims of car accident
Sea Lots residents show they have not forgotten the mother and her two daughters who were killed when a car driven by an off-duty officer ploughed into them.

This fact is in stark contrast to the walkover which was started in March of 2014 in the borough of Chaguanas and completed in time for Divali, an annual Hindu religious celebration, which was observed in November of the same year. Its primary purpose being to service devotees and visitors to the Divali Nagar site, since there isn’t a residential community in this area.

This has not gone unnoticed by the citizens of this country and especially the residents of Sea Lots.

Posted in Today's Message | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Why Wasn’t the Brian Lara Cricket Stadium Finished?

Recently, I had a unique opportunity to tour the now abandoned and incomplete Brian Lara Cricket Stadium, and I had to ask myself, why wasn’t this wonderful facility completed?

Looking at the stadium from the outside while driving through Tarouba along the Sir Solomon Hochoy Highway, I, and many citizens of this country had wondered, will it ever be finished?

In September last year, this country’s Finance Minister, Larry Howai, while on a local radio station, said the Ministry of Sport informed him the Stadium cannot be used to play cricket.

However, in a Trinidad Express article addressing Minister Howai’s statements, the Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board (TTCB) president, Azim Bassarath, said after two practice matches were played at the Stadium leading up to the 2009 regional season, the [cricket] pitch was considered to be one of the better surfaces.

My tour of the stadium strongly suggested to me had a little more money been spent, despite the significant cost overruns already incurred, this facility would have been one of the jewels of the cricketing world.
Thus penegra makes generic viagra store the sex easy for impotent men. Kamagra is cialis prescription online one of the best medicines in healing impotence. You can gain harder and fuller erection for the order viagra uk http://respitecaresa.org/staff/b-trevino/ lovemaking. The sexual problems can come in the form of erectile dysfunction, then they did use many medicines that click here for more info cialis no prescription are available for treating erectile dysfunction are termed PDE5-inhibitors.
I was shocked and deeply saddened at what I saw Trinidad and Tobago; close to a billion TT dollars was spent on a facility we may never use for the purpose for which it was constructed.

Visit the Photo Library link on this site to see some of the images I took of the stadium.

Also, you can view related video footage taken at the Stadium, below.

Views : 196

Posted in Home | Leave a comment