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Friday, April 11, 2025

Fresh fence repairs at Belmont Secondary to begin during vacation

by

Carisa Lee
696 days ago
20230515

Re­porter

carisa.lee@cnc3.co.tt

T&T Uni­fied Teach­ers’ As­so­ci­a­tion (TTUTA) pres­i­dent Mar­tin Lum Kin has met with Bel­mont Sec­ondary School teach­ers, fol­low­ing their protest ac­tion at the school re­cent­ly.

Dur­ing a lunchtime meet­ing yes­ter­day, Lum Kin told the teach­ers that the Min­istry of Ed­u­ca­tion had sent out ten­ders and that work would be­gin on a per­ma­nent fence dur­ing the Ju­ly/Au­gust va­ca­tion.

This was sub­se­quent­ly con­firmed by Ed­u­ca­tion Min­is­ter Dr Nyan Gads­by-Dol­ly, who, in a re­sponse to Guardian Me­dia, said the pro­cure­ment process for the con­trac­tor was on­go­ing. She said once this was com­plete, re­pairs would be­gin.

On an­oth­er is­sue, Lum Kin yes­ter­day said the union would make rep­re­sen­ta­tion at the lev­el of the Per­ma­nent Sec­re­tary to see whether the teach­ers could forego hav­ing to ap­ply for the days they missed dur­ing a re­fusal to work protest ac­tion over the bro­ken fence and their se­cu­ri­ty con­cerns af­ter two gun­men en­tered the com­pound and ac­cost­ed a safe­ty of­fi­cer re­cent­ly.

He said they should not have to ap­ply for the days, as the teach­ers were un­der duress and phys­i­o­log­i­cal­ly im­pact­ed by the in­ci­dent.

Lum Kin told Guardian Me­dia that the teach­ers were much bet­ter yes­ter­day but the fear was still there. He said, how­ev­er, the teach­ers would abide by the law.

Last week, the teach­ers ap­pealed a re­fusal to work ac­tion that was turned down by the Oc­cu­pa­tion­al Safe­ty and Health Au­thor­i­ty and Agency (OS­HA). The ac­tion was tak­en be­cause the teach­ers were un­sat­is­fied with the fence re­pairs done by con­trac­tors hired by the Ed­u­ca­tion Min­istry.

“When they came back out and saw the patch­work, they say nah,” a source con­nect­ed to the school said.

“They used BRC wire and tie wire, it could ba­si­cal­ly be un­tied with your hand…Any­body who wants to get in can eas­i­ly get in.”

The se­cu­ri­ty breach by the gun­men al­so caused par­ents to keep the 400-plus chil­dren away from school. They protest­ed out­side the school on May 2 and 5 for the fence to be re­paired.

Con­trac­tors start­ed work on May 6 and some stu­dents re­turned on May 8.


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