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Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Guyana teachers’ strike called off; conciliation talks to begin on Wednesday

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333 days ago
20240621
Representatives of the Ministry of Education and the Guyana Teachers Union emerge from their deliberations on Friday 21 June 2024. (GTU Photo)

Representatives of the Ministry of Education and the Guyana Teachers Union emerge from their deliberations on Friday 21 June 2024. (GTU Photo)

The Guyana Teach­ers Union (GTU) Fri­day urged teach­ers to re­turn to their jobs by Wednes­day next week so that the con­cil­i­a­tion talks that led to the end of the 70-day strike on Fri­day could re­sume “as soon as pos­si­ble”.

“Teach­ers are ex­pect­ed to re­turn by Tues­day…on Wednes­day the union com­mences con­cil­i­a­tion. Now if you don’t re­turn in those two days the con­cil­i­a­tion can­not start and the ear­li­er the con­cil­i­a­tion starts the bet­ter it is for our teach­ers who have suf­fered, have gone through a lot of men­tal health is­sues and the union is cog­nizant of that,” GTU pres­i­dent Dr. Mark Lyte said in live state­ment on the GTU’s Face­book page.

Ed­u­ca­tion Min­is­ter Priya Man­ickc­hand in a post on the so­cial me­dia plat­form, Face­book, con­firmed that the teach­ers will end the on­go­ing strike and re­sume work with­in two work­ing days.

Lyte said that the sit­u­a­tion has been a “very dif­fi­cult time for all of us” across Guyana and thanked the mem­ber­ship for stand­ing with the union “when no one lese stood” in­clud­ing the Guyana Trades Union Con­gress (GTUC), the Caribbean Union of Teach­ers (CUT) and Ed­u­ca­tion In­ter­na­tion­al.

Ac­cord­ing to the “Agree­ment on Re­sump­tion” doc­u­ment signed by GTU and Min­istry of Ed­u­ca­tion Of­fi­cials, “there shall be no vic­tim­iza­tion by ei­ther par­ty” as well as “there shall be no loss of ser­vice for any teacher/ed­u­ca­tor”.

In ad­di­tion, the agree­ment stip­u­lates “there shall be an end to the strike and full re­sump­tion of work by all teach­ers/ed­u­ca­tors with­in two work­ing days” and that the teach­ers and ed­u­ca­tors will re­turn to their re­spec­tive po­si­tions held be­fore the strike.

In ad­di­tion, there “shall beno trans­fers up­on re­sump­tion” and that ‘the sta­tus quo shall pre­vail sub­ject to any rul­ing which may em­anate from ex­tant le­gal pro­ceed­ings be­tween the two par­ties”.

There is al­so agree­ment that the re­sump­tion of the talks “shall be held in ac­cor­dance with the ex­ist­ing 1990 Mem­o­ran­dum of Agree­ment”.

The union had been seek­ing a 20 per cent in­ter­im salary in­crease or a GUY$150,000 (One Guyana dol­lar=US$0.004 cents) one-off -pay­ment to all teach­ers as a con­di­tion for call­ing off the strike, but Lyte said the teach­ers had even­tu­al­ly agreed to for­go any fi­nan­cial de­mands to make way for con­cil­i­a­tion.

“Dur­ing the lapse be­tween June 10th and now, we went back to our mem­ber­ship to state the po­si­tion that the gov­ern­ment has adopt­ed and the mem­bers have in­di­cat­ed to us that they are pre­pared to al­low the process to be fol­lowed mi­nus the in­ter­im pay­ment or the cash grant,” he said.

Lyte said Fri­day’s sign­ing of the Terms of Re­sump­tion was as a re­sult of a new con­sul­ta­tions.

The union wants gov­ern­ment to ne­go­ti­ate salary in­creas­es on a pro­pos­al for 2019 to 2023 but the gov­ern­ment con­tin­ues to main­tain that pay ne­go­ti­a­tions must be for a mul­ti-year agree­ment be­gin­ning 2024.

“Both sides are com­mit­ted. As you can see, one of the claus­es says that we are pre­pared to ne­go­ti­ate in good faith so let’s see what that good faith will be,” he said.

He not­ed: “Key to this would be the clause that al­lows us to re­turn in the new week to have con­cil­i­a­tion on the time-frame and al­so both par­ties have agreed to be bound by the 1990 Griev­ance Pro­ce­dure Mem­o­ran­dum and that stip­u­lates the time­lines for all the process­es”.

GTU gen­er­al sec­re­tary, Coret­ta Mc Don­ald, said she hopes that the two sides could reach agree­ment be­fore schools re­open in Sep­tem­ber.

“While we were go­ing back and forth, the na­tion’s chil­dren were suf­fer­ing all this time and that was our con­cern. While we are con­cerned about our teach­ers’ wel­fare, the na­tion’s chil­dren were suf­fer­ing,” she added.

Teach­ers be­gan their in­dus­tri­al ac­tion on Feb­ru­ary 5, in sup­port of their union’s de­mands for  high­er salaries  and du­ty-free con­ces­sions, among oth­er ben­e­fits.

Fol­low­ing a court me­di­at­ed process in March, talks be­tween the Min­istry of Ed­u­ca­tion and GTU re­sumed. But the dis­cus­sions came to a halt when the min­istry in­di­cat­ed that there was no fis­cal space to cater for in­creas­es for the pe­ri­od 2019 -2023. In­creas­es for 2024 and fu­ture years were put for con­sid­er­a­tion in­stead.

Speak­ing at a news con­fer­ence on Thurs­day, Pres­i­dent Ir­faan Ali said there was the pos­si­bil­i­ty that the in­dus­tri­al ac­tion would end soon.

“There has been a lot of on­go­ing work, dis­cus­sions in re­la­tion to the re­sump­tion of work and al­so the is­sues raised by teach­ers.

“I don’t want to go in any ex­tend­ed way in re­sponse to this. From the most re­cent feed­back I have re­ceived, there seems to be some move­ment and in re­la­tion to get­ting to an ini­tial agree­ment on terms that will see this sit­u­a­tion re­sumed to some amount of nor­mal­cy,” Pres­i­dent Ali told a news con­fer­ence. —GEORGE­TOWN, Guyana (CMC)


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