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Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves addressed the nation during Monday's Independence parade. (IWN photo)
Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves addressed the nation during Monday’s Independence parade. (IWN photo)
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The government will from January increase the salary of its part-time workers such as cleaners and School Feeding Programme kitchen staff, Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves announced in his address on Monday to mark the nation’s 35th anniversary of independence from Britain.

“In the same vein, our government will shortly set in train the review upwards of the statutory minimum wages for various categories of workers,” he also announced to the thousands of persons who attended the military parade at Victoria Park, and media audiences.

“Shortly too, our government will be engaging the public sector trade unions on the issue of improved terms of work for the public servants — all categories of public servants,” said Gonsalves, who is also Minister of Finance.

Gonsalves, however, did not announce an end-of-year bonus, as some persons had hoped, as shown by a few voices shouting “Bonus! Bonus!” just before the Prime Minister took to the podium.

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But Gonsalves did announce that several existing policies will continue, and a plan to give government buildings in Kingstown an EC$50 million facelift over a five-year period.

He announced that the duty-free concessions on Christmas barrels, which his government pioneered in 2001, will this year run from Nov. 17 to Dec. 31.

National colours were the order of the day at the independence parade.
National colours were the order of the day at the independence parade. (IWN photo)

A special Christmas works programme of at least EC$3 million, plus a special clean-up provision of EC$500,000 for capital Kingstown, will be executed this year.

“Thousand of Vincentians will receive short-term employment under the programme,” Gonsalves said, adding that all the money will be spent before Christmas.

He said that he is finalising an order for EC$6 million in building materials, including a provision for materials, to begin in January 2015 the “Lives to Live” housing programme, which will see the government building wooden houses for persons with physical and other disabilities.

“We have to take care of them very specially,” Gonsalves said.

He also announced that the soft loan of EC$6 million to the Farmers Support Company will be buttressed by a further EC$6 million for 2015.

Gonsalves said he plans to put plans in place so that the farmers can get the money early in the New Year.

Advertisements are already published for the 2015 applicants for the Support for Education and Training (SET) programme, Gonsalves pointed out.

Under the SET programme, interns who have A’ Level and associate degree qualifications will receive a stipend of EC$1,100 per month, while those with university degrees will receive EC$2,200, for up to one year’s employment with the government.

Gonsalves also said that his government last week decided on “a bonanza” of national scholarships.

Troops form "35" at the Independence parade. (IWN photo)
Troops form “35” at the Independence parade. (IWN photo)

The government has awarded national scholarships to Shannique Clarke, Aexandra De Freitas, Shanka Edwards, Lleta Lewis, Lafeisha Hadley, Shafel Mc Dowall, Dimitri Kennedy, Anson Latachman, Angelina Questelles, Katherine Renton, and Mbeki Swift.

Exhibition scholarships were awarded to Syprian Isaacs, Trevol Grant, and Rayan John, while Kenichia Charles, Cle-Ann Collins, Anson Evans, Pedrique Pompey, Reenah Samuel and Sonya Morgan were awarded bursaries.

Gonsalves said the total cost of the awards will be EC$5 million.

“These are in additional to the plenitude of tertiary education opportunities through other scholarships, tuition bursaries and student loans for economically disadvantaged students,” he said, adding that St. Vincent and the Grenadines is on target to have, on average, at least one university graduate per household by 2015.

“The poor and the working people, along with others are now going to university in numbers they couldn’t dream of 15 years ago.”

The Prime Minister told the nation that in the Budget Address for 2015, he will detail a five-year, EC$50 million programme of rehabilitation and construction programme of government buildings in Kingstown, starting next year.

“This is part of a more comprehensive urban development plan for our capital city. We have to make Kingstown look a lot much better and fix it up properly once and for all,” he said.

Gonsalves also acknowledged that many of the secondary village and feeder roads “are in a state of disrepair.

“The recovery effort after the Christmas Eve disaster of 2013 interrupted somewhat our comprehensive road repair programme. That road repair programme has resumed, and will be intensified in early 2015,” he said.

4 replies on “St. Vincent gov’t to raise salaries of its part-time workers (+Video)”

  1. “Thousand of Vincentians will receive short-term employment under the program”

    Well it’s time for the Vincy world cup again, eh ehmm, sorry I mean elections. These guys only do things to win election, you don’t see them or hear from them any other time. I saw Kingstown with my own eyes and I refused to eat there, some parts of it are just pure filt and nastiness but don’t worry this $500,000 dollars is coming just before elections to clean it.

    Vincentians have seen through this election game of deception being played with their lives. When they are suffering everyday and don’t even know what they are going to put on fire to cook. The bell must ring.

    OWN THE JAIL

  2. You say, “We have to make Kingstown look a lot much better and fix it up properly once and for all.”

    Why don’t you start by getting the hundreds of vendors off the sidewalks and away from the front entrances of business places where they block pedestrian traffic and impede legitimate business practice by relocating them to the underused central market and other vacant areas.

    Why do ordinary citizens have to unsafely dodge traffic on the road to make way for unlicensed, non-VAT-paying hucksters most of whose produce entersduty-free in barrels via the Christmas exemption?

    Don’t you realize that this is blatant unfair competition with legal tax-paying enterprises who would be able employ hundreds more tax-paying persons save for the presence of these illegitimate vendors?

    If you can’t deal with an issue that every other Caribbean country except Haiti has been willing and able deal with — a properly organized, managed, and regulated system of small-scale retailing — how can you ever hope to “make Kingstown look a lot much better and fix it up properly once and for all?”

  3. Poor Christmas-eve disaster is blamed for everything now. No payment to NIS, no road repairs,etc. I wonder if it will be blamed for the up-coming change of government?

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