kimsleyferguson

kimsleyferguson

Protesters to PM promises: ‘If you can’t get our money, ring the bell’

Hundreds of public service workers marched on Parliament on Wednesday, demanding the delayed wage increases promised by the government.

Protesters chanted, “If you can’t get our money, ring the bell,” as some clashed with police officers and others sat in the street behind barricades.

Union leaders from the Bahamas Public Services Union (BPSU) Kimsley Ferguson and the Bahamas Union of Teachers (BUT), Belinda Wilson, called out the government for excluding certain worker groups and failing to properly consult them.

Wilson and Ferguson marched to the door of the House of Assembly but were initially denied entrance. Eventually, they were permitted inside and soon appeared walking hand in hand with Prime Minister Philip Davis.

Davis, also the Minister of Finance, addressing the crowd, reiterated the promise that payments would be made before Christmas, with back pay retroactive to September, and said the decision came “from my heart.”

“First of all, the decision to give y’all some money came from me, from my heart. I understood that y’all need that. It was nothing negotiated. I’m trying to help all of you. Y’all will be paid and the payment will be before Christmas. You will be paid before Christmas.”

Why does it matter

Public servants have long called for pay increases and have expressed being ignored and undervalued.

The promise of a pay increase for September initially, then pushed to December, adds to their frustration.

The government’s promise to meet retroactive wage increases can add pressure to the national budget, as the country prepares for a by-election and a general election.

What’s at stake

Any delay in payment or a partial payment will deepen frustrations. If some worker categories remain excluded, it could reignite protests.

If the government delivers and everyone is happy, it will boost morale before a general election.

Frustrated Workers Take To Down Town for Pay Increases

Scores of workers of the Bahamas Public Service Union gathered near Parliament Square advocating for pay increases, chanting “We want our money and we want it now.”

What happened

The group along with President Kimsley Ferguson is calling for salary increases and has accused the government of ‘union busting.’ He said the government is stalling negotiations and the union is still waiting for its industrial agreement to be signed.

While Down Town, he and other leaders of various unions in the country held a conversation with Deputy Prime Minister Chester Cooper but Ferguson said he was not satisfied and was “very disappointed”  in the government’s response.

“There is a serious case for concern when there is no integrity in the leadership of the country… There is no one to speak for the public servants,” he said.

Ferguson said he and the group will up the ante if the demands for increased pay are not met.

“We will continue to agitate until we get the results we want.”

Why it matters

The government has proposed annual increases for permanent secretaries, directors and department heads. The union says it shows that the government has sufficient funding to give public servants adequate increases.