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LIAT pilots keep pressure on shareholder govts to pay out ex-pilots

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The pilots union at the cash-strapped regional airline, LIAT, on Tuesday called on its shareholder governments to assist in reaching a settlement regarding the outstanding severance payments owed to the airline’s ex-pilots.

Patterson Thompson, President of the Leeward Islands Airline Pilots Association (LIALPA) who took to the airwaves on Observer Radio in Antigua, said while the coronavirus pandemic had complicated matters, some commitment should be made by the shareholder governments to meet the outstanding payments to the former employees.

He said the governments of Barbados, St. Vincent and the Grenadines and Dominica should join with the efforts being undertaken by Antigua and Barbuda’s Prime Minister Gaston Browne to deal with the situation.

Thompson declared: “If you don’t want to join together with Mr Browne’s efforts what can you do for us down there, you and Prime Minister (Dr Ralph) Gonsalves (of St. Vincent and the Grenadines)? And that’s the issue.

‘We talking about …slavery  – we going back 400 years, but this happened in 2020. Charity begins at home, let us come together as a Caribbean group and deal with the problem.

‘If you tell me I could pay the money over two or three years, I could probably live with that, but just cut us off at the knees, ankles…we served the country, all of us. Not only Bajans, not only Antiguans, [but] there were Grenadians, Vincentians, St. Lucians, Kittitians, Trinis, Guyanese.”

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Last month, Prime Minister Browne appealed to regional trade unions to re-think their positions on the latest offer made to the airline’s laid-off workers.

Browne said what is required is the unions’ cooperation, noting that “some union leaders…are making unreasonable demands, making demands in which they have no legal basis to do”.

The Antiguan leader added: “As I have said to the other unions if they really think they are owed 100 per cent of their severance and staff liabilities, go to court and prove it. If they can’t prove it then the governments are giving you a compassionate payment, take it and run.”

The airline had laid off about 90 per cent of its staff last year as part of a restructuring exercise and has resumed operations on a much smaller scale.

President of the Dominica-based Waterfront and Allied Workers Union (WAWU), Donald Rolle, said that the regional unions are united in seeking the millions of dollars owed to the workers and have rejected the latest offer from the shareholder governments.

“The offer on the table which is to pay the LIAT workers, 50 per cent of their redundancy pay and there is a component that involves compensation by issuing of lands and bonds,” Rolle said. “But the unions around the Caribbean have sort of rejected that in its entirety, but we are in negotiations with the governments. We have a position and as it is now, we are at opposite ends of the table.”

But another LIALPA executive member, Arian Blanchard, who also appeared on the radio programme, said while there has been an offer made to the workers, it is not in writing.

“We are a very responsible and caring executive,” he told Observer Radio. “We are exploring all avenues to get the details we needed to clarify in the proposal and we did so as the president would have mentioned at a meeting with PM Browne and he clarified the details.

“But we cannot go back to our members and say the prime minister said. That’s hearsay. We have to have it in the proposal so we can take it back to our members at which point the members will make their decision to accept the offer. But we have to have that document and this is where we are right now.”

He warned of the possibility of pilots and engineers “seeking employment overseas if the matter is not settled soon.

“I speak to a lot of members all the time,” said Blanchard. “Mentally it is taxing because most people would be responsible for their families and in some cases, there are people who both of the breadwinners were employed by LIAT.”

Thompson dismissed the suggestion that the airline pilots should take some of the blame for the airline’s troubles, saying that management had taken some irresponsible decisions.

“LIAT has made mistakes over and over and over a period of time,” he said, recalling that the association had warned them against withdrawing from a certain route, which they subsequently ignored.

“And then when we went back into St. Thomas three days a week, the flights (were) three-quarters [full]. The pilots did not do that. We are sick of these people running with nonsense that has been fed out there,” he said, adding “the biggest problem with LIAT is that there was always political interference in the airline and it was never allowed to run as an airline business.”

The airline is owned by the governments of Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica and St Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG). Last year, Browne said that a decision had been taken that would allow Barbados and SVG to turn over their shares in LIAT to Antigua and Barbuda for one EC dollar (One EC dollar = 75 cents;  US$0.37 cents).

Browne said that LIAT, under administration, had returned an operational profit for the months of July and August, suggesting that a leaner, more efficient LIAT can be profitable.

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REQUEST FOR EXPRESSIONS OF INTEREST

(CONSULTING SERVICES – INDIVIDUAL SELECTION)

 

OECS MSME Guarantee Facility Project

Loan No.: IDA-62670, IDA-62660, IDA-62640, IBRD-88830, IDA-62650

Assignment Title: Senior Operating Officer (SOO)

Reference No. KN-ECPCGC-207852-CS-INDV

 

The Governments of Antigua and Barbuda, Commonwealth of Dominica, Grenada, St. Lucia and St. Vincent and the Grenadines have received financing in the amount of US$10 million equivalent from the World Bank towards the cost of establishing a partial credit guarantee scheme, and they intend to apply part of the proceeds to payments for goods, and consulting services to be procured under this project. 

The consultant will serve as the “Senior Operating Officer (SOO)” for the ECPCGC and should possess extensive knowledge of MSME lending with some direct experience lending to Micro, small and medium-sized businesses, knowledge of the internal control processes necessary for a lending operation and the ability to design and implement risk mitigation procedures. The ideal candidate should possess an Undergraduate Degree from a reputable college or university, preferably in Business, Accounting, Banking or related field, with a minimum of 5 years’ experience in lending, inclusive of MSME lending. The initial employment period will be for two years on a contractual basis. Renewal of the contract will be subject to a performance evaluation at the end of the contractual period. The assignment is expected to begin on September 30th, 2021.  The consultant will report directly to the Chief Executive Officer of the ECPCGC.

The detailed Terms of Reference (TOR) for the assignment can be viewed by following the attached link below. 

 

https://bit.ly/3iVannm

 

The Eastern Caribbean Partial Credit Guarantee Corporation (ECPCGC) now invites eligible “Consultants” to indicate their interest in providing the Services. Interested Consultants should provide information demonstrating that they have:

  • An Undergraduate Degree from a reputable college or university, preferably in Business, Finance, Banking or related field; and
  • Minimum of 5 years’ experience in MSME lending. Applicants should also have:
  • The ability to design and implement risk management procedures 
  • Extensive knowledge of MSME lending with some direct experience lending to small and medium-sized businesses
  • Extensive knowledge of MSME banking operations
  • Knowledge of the internal controls necessary for a lending operation and the ability to design and implement risk management procedures
  • Experience developing and presenting information in public, including responding to questions in real-time
  • Experience lending to MSMEs located in the ECCU
  • Knowledge of marketing and communicating with the MSME sector
  • Ability to draft procedures to be used in a lending operation
  • Familiarity with the mechanics of a loan guarantee program
  • Exceptional written, oral, interpersonal, and presentation skills, and
  • Proficiency in the use of Microsoft Office suite.

The attention of interested Individual Consultants is drawn to Section III, Paragraphs 3.14, 3.16, and 3.17 of the World Bank’s Procurement Regulations for IPF Borrowers July 2016, [revised November 2017] (“Procurement Regulations”), setting forth the World Bank’s policy on conflict of interest. A Consultant will be selected in accordance with the Approved Selection Method for Individual Consultants set out in the clause 7.34 of the World Bank Procurement Regulations for IPF Borrowers. 

 

Further information can be obtained at the address below during office hours 0800 to 1700 hours:

Eastern Caribbean Partial Credit Guarantee Corporation

Brid Rock, Basseterre,

St. Kitts.

Expressions of interest must be delivered in a written form by e-mail by August 11th, 2021, to [email protected]

 

For further information, please contact:

Carmen Gomez-Trigg                                                            Bernard Thomas

Chief Executive Officer                                                          Chief Financial Officer

Tel: 868-620-8144                                                                  Tel: 869-765-2385

Email: [email protected]                                          [email protected]