Combat - 13 May - 30 June 2018

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Issue#3 Volume#39

Combat Voice of the Guyana Agricultural and General Workers Union (GAWU)

Editorial

Sugar confusion

The situation in the sugar industry has reached a new high, or rather one could very well say a new low, with the seeming warring between the GuySuCo and the NICIL-SPU now being played out in the media. When the various press reports are read, it sounds like a soap opera, and makes the iconic Link Show seem like child’s play.

13 May - 30 June, 2018

2018 first crop ends - sugar production falls below target

But the obvious irony aside, the acrimonious relations between the two (2) bodies which are charged with managing different sections of the sugar industry has reached, from all appearances, a toxic stage to the point where literally the dirty linens are being washed in the public. This unexpected, strange twist, as it were, is the latest in the confusion that has enveloped the industry since the new Government took charge three (3) years ago. It is a far cry from what was heard in the 2015 National and Regional Elections. At that point in time, workers, like all Guyanese, heard from our now-a-days Government leaders that they would safeguard the sugar industry; they would protect workers’ jobs; and they would pay workers substantial pay rises, among other things. Today one wonders where those sentiments are. Have they been forgotten, like many other commitments the Guyanese people received during the elections campaign. Today, the sugar industry, and more so its workers have moved from having allies in the APNU/ AFC to being the Government’s regular punching bag. Today many Governmental failures are blamed on the industry. Who can forget Minister of Public Security, Khemraj Ramjattan, blaming the destructive prison fire on the industry. Or, what about the denial of improved pay rates to public servants because of sugar? Incidentally, the sugar industry, from all appearances, wasn’t a factor when the Cabinet gave itself hefty pay increases just days after it assumed office; and it wasn’t a consideration when Ministerial perks were expanded; and didn’t enter our leaders’ mind when they decided to contract private medical insurance, which the State is financing to some extent. Far too often, the sugar industry is blamed, though its contribution to national life is conspicuously ignored. Just take, for instance, its role in providing drainage to many communities along our low-lying coastal plain. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to imagine what would happen if that important function provided by the industry ceases. The economic impact of flooding would be tremendous, as the 2005 floods revealed. Today, that real reality, among the several others, is ignored, and sugar is solely and only seen from profitand-loss perspective. Continued on page two (2) COMBAT 13 May - 30 June, 2018

The first sugar crop 2018 saw the sugar industry producing 34,450 tonnes sugar as against 36,105 tonnes sugar that was expected. The crop went a few weeks beyond its schedule, yet the the production target was not met.

The 2018 first sugar crop came to an end on week ending May 12, 2018 after thirteen (13) weeks. The crop which should have ended on weekending April 28, 2018 was extended by four (4) weeks, and came to a halt following the onset of the rainy season. Production from the three (3) operable estates was as follows:Estate Albion Blairmont Uitvlugt Total

Target 19,968 9,736 6,671 36,105

Actual Difference 18,232 (1,466) 9,121 (615) 7,097 426 34,450 (1,655)

The non-achievement of the crop’s target is indeed not positive news at this time. It serves to highlight what seems to be, from all appearances, the poor management of the Corporation. Undoubtedly, it brings once again into focus concerns regarding the Corporation’s utilization of the financing it was receiving from the Treasury. With billions of dollars supposedly being spent to purchase critical inputs such as fertilizers and chemicals, it is indeed disheartening to see the results which are being reaped.

In view of what clearly are dismal results, the GAWU reiterates its call for a breakdown of the utilization of the sums the Corporation received from the State. The Union recalls Finance Minister Winston Jordan telling the press a few weeks ago, that the Government was not fully aware of how the monies it provided to the Corporation were actually expended. Previously, the Corporation had said most of the monies were utilized to pay its employees, but the GuySuCo financial statements had pointed out that this wasn’t the case. In fact, the 2016 figures indicated the employment costs had been falling. This was not surprising, considering that the Corporation, a state-owned enterprise, had not given its workers a pay rise since 2014 and it bluntly walked away from honouring long-standing payments such as the Annual Production Incentive (API), among other things. At this time, all attention is turned to the second sugar crop, which usually commences towards latter-July or early-August. Already, at the beginning of the year, the Corporation had reduced its production target, and everything is pointing to a further reduction before the second crop commences.

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