Some persons want their boats lifted as priority without concern for other needs

Dear Editor,
“The rising tide lifts all boats” is a truism that holds, and so it is as Guyana’s economy grows but some want their boats lifted as a priority, they also think their boats are more important and deserve to be higher.

Fueled by wild assertions about the amount of ‘oil money’ being earned, there is a scramble for a ‘fair share’ with no thought for others, for sustainability, for infrastructure, for investment in youth through education and job creation; it is more for public servants, more for teachers, nurses, police, soldiers, more, more, more!

The teachers are on strike for more despite the lowest paid being $205,000 per month; the Police must be watching this with some amazement as a Constable makes the same as a Trainee teacher and Corporal makes $134,000 per month for much more responsibilities than an untrained graduate teacher.

I would think the police need attention before the teachers, and then there are the nurses, who certainly deserve more. The point is we (Guyanese) are all in the same boat and it will take time for the improvements to come to our sector.
The ‘oil money’ is funding less than 20% of the 2024 budget; it cannot cover the present public sector salaries much less fund selective increases.

The teachers have benefited from full pay during the pandemic without a requirement to be at work, unlike the police and nurses who were deemed ‘essential’ and had to turn up or be fired. On a regular day, there is 30% absenteeism of teachers in school, in any other service people would be booted.

Teachers have decided that ‘the squeaky wheel gets the grease’ and it is better to follow the noisemaker than wait for the tide; to facilitate them at the expense of other public sector workers would be a folly and inevitably lead to ever-widening circles of labour disputes and unrest.

A stern warning should be issued and then firm action to rein in those who have this sense of entitlement at the expense of the rest of us. The strike numbers are not public but I believe there were more than 70% of the teachers in school today, which is higher than average; an irony that does not escape notice.
Sincerely,
Robin Singh

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