Tuesday, April 16, 2013

4% Back on the Table

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Kenny Anthony is a farce. There is nothing going on for this Country. Everyone except his hookers-on have lost all confidence in him.

This country is just waiting to exhale. To clean them all away. The sooner the better for this country.

Anonymous said...

Aren't these some of the same conditions that the other unions wanted and csa regarded as being not useful to them?

Anonymous said...

The CSA about-face shows puerile negotiating skills on the part of the supposedly most technically skilled workers on the island. Even when the claim that to accept the increase would make some members worse-off after taxes was not made with any visible conviction.

There was no concrete figure as to the percentage of those members or in what specific classifications would be made worse off by acceptance of the government's offer.

The body language spoke louder at the press briefing than the actual words verbalized.

The leader of the CSA and its apparent chief negotiator did not appear to be on the same page.

The CSA needs to get its act together.

You cannot say on the one hand that the government will decide and almost in the same breath talk about what you want from government. Utter confusion.

Parties negotiate a package and sign a collective bargaining agreement. No?

One is left to draw the conclusion that the CSA appears to be all at sea regarding the industrial relations process.

Anonymous said...

Simple math: If I am at a lower grade earning $1500 a month, I do not pay income taxes. With a 4% increase, this pushes me into the income tax net with a salary of $1560. It now means that I have to pay 7.5% in income taxes, which amounts to $117 a month.

In essence, the government has given me $60 and then collects $117--the difference is that I am now $57 poorer than if I had not accepted the increase. Not every increase is truly an increase!

Anonymous said...

Did Mary Issacs get it wrong? The CSA never said it like this: 9.5% or we will settle for just our other proposals and forget about the 4.0% wage/salary increase.