Senior Multimedia Reporter
radhica.sookraj@guardian.co.tt
Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar says her Government will do all it can to save public sector jobs.
“We have no intention of cutting back jobs in the public service. In fact, we intend to fill vacancies, thousands of vacancies in the public service on a phased basis. This is my plan, that we will advertise and let people come in to apply for the jobs in the public service,” Persad-Bissessar said after making an appearance at the closing of the Java Cricket Camp in Penal yesterday.
However, she admitted Government would have to look at the contract employment situation within the sector.
“On the other hand, what we may have to cut is contract employment because the salaries are much, much higher. You have no security of tenure in your job. You cannot get a loan. You cannot get a mortgage. You cannot leverage your job on contract. And they are by nature not fixed, so that you could be sent home at any time. So, the monies from savings on the contract jobs will be used to help us fund more public sector jobs. That is my vision. As I say, it will have to happen on a phased basis.”
The Prime Minister was responding to claims that the State was having difficulty paying public servants’ salaries in recent weeks and an allegation by former finance minister Colm Imbert that Government had been using money meant for loans to conduct critical work at State agencies and funding for the last two months of fiscal 2025. Imbert made the claim during a People’s National Movement meeting in Morvant on Tuesday night. (See page 7)
On these economic matters, Persad-Bissessar criticised former minister of finance Imbert, saying: “Well, I would like to ask the former Minister of Finance what he did with $566 billion, because everything is in a state of shambles. And he borrowed to pay borrowings, loans. So, nothing is new in finance. There are different financing mechanisms. And they left us with an empty treasury.”
She continued, “My Government will do all that we can to keep the country working and moving along again. So, if we use the financing mechanisms, nothing is new about that. And nothing will be old about that. He (Imbert) did the same and more.”