The Communication Workers’ Union is demanding answers from TSTT on its acquisition of Amplia, saying it believes the decision is an attempt to send home thousands of workers.
Speaking on the CNC3’s Morning Brew on Wednesday CWU General Secretary Clyde Elder said TSTT has informed residential fibre customers that Amplia will be handling the work from October 15.
Elder said this effectively means that “they are diminishing and decreasing the work of the TSTT staff and we see that as an attempt to lay the foundation to retrench persons at some point in time.”
He said TSTT staff is “unionised, they are a permanent workforce,” as he accused the company of violating article 12 of the industrial agreement. He said requests for a meeting had gone unanswered.
Elder said TSTT has the most robust fibre network in the Caribbean which has been operated by workers. Elder said the union was also part of a Fibre Implementation Project team.
“We are on board to ensure that TSTT is viable and moves into the new age,” he said.
Elder said what TSTT was not telling customers was that “they will send you across, whether you like it or not.” But, he said, Amplia “does not have a mobile concession or licence, they depend on TSTT service to give you a service. It means they are the middle man and you will pay more.”
Last Friday, the Industrial Court ruled in favour of the union and TSTT issued a brief statement describing the court ruling as “surprising.” Elder said the real question is “why did they not appeal the judgement of the Industrial Court.”
Following the court ruling TSTT said it will take the required next steps to ensure that the company will continue towards sustained profitability.
TSTT insisted it “does not outsource its residential fibre services.”
It said, “Amplia is a 100 per cent wholly-owned subsidiary of TSTT and has always operated as such. TSTT manages all of its operations in good faith and will continue to do so.”
Elder insisted that Amplia had been bad for TSTT. He said, “TSTT made a profit of less than $8 m at the end of the last financial year and that is because of the Amplia acquisition that took a hit on the company’s financial position.”
He said TSTT paid “$215 m for Amplia,” money which, he said, “could have been invested in TSTT” to make the company more financially viable.
Elder accused TSTT of “playing semantics,” saying in law Amplia is a separate legal entity to TSTT.
He said what was happening at TSTT was “Petrotrin in the reverse,” as he accused the Government of having a plan “to destroy unions.”
According to Elder, “with CWU, there is no data to suggest that job cuts are needed. What we agree on, is that once you moving from copper to fibre it will result in the reorganising and realignment of the company, but that does not necessarily translate into fewer workers.”