The Trinidad and Tobago Unified Teachers' Association (TTUTA) has accepted the Chief Personnel Officer (CPO) five per cent offer for the period 2020 to 2023 with a spread of one per cent, one per cent, three per cent which represent a closure of the gap by 18.2% per cent followed by the consolidation of the Cost of Living Allowance (COLA) and other improved terms and conditions for members of the Teaching Service.
CPO, Commander Dr. Daryl Dindial, stated that negotiations, which began in November 2024 and continued with significant technical sub-committee work into the new year, were very challenging.
He commended TTUTA’s leadership for their persistence and professionalism in advancing arguments for their membership while also indicating he was also very humbled by their "reasonableness, rationality and even their understanding of the current macroeconomic realities our nation is confronting."
Dindial said the period under review was the COVID period where the country experienced -9.1 per cent, -1.8 per cent (2020-2021) in deficit before experiencing a + 1.5 per cent in growth in 2022, yet he said the State maintained employment levels throughout and saw it fit to further increase wages in the Public Service. He stated, the country must not forget that during the period the nation's teachers operated in the dual system of education to support the developmental needs of our children.
The CPO also announced that he received approval from the Minister of Finance to commence the Job Evaluation Exercise for the Teaching Service a year earlier than initially scheduled. The long-awaited exercise is aimed at modernising the compensation structure and identifying changes in the roles of educators in the Teaching Service.
Dindial added that the work with TTUTA is continuous and wanted teachers to know that matters pertaining to the Group Health Plan, classification of leave, determination of increments, transition of the third schedule personnel into the Teaching Service Compensation Plan, the upgrade of Assistant Teachers and the training of personnel who administer terms and conditions at the Tobago House of Assembly are all being advanced with the support of the Ministry of Education.
Guardian Media reached out to TTUTA for comment on this but did not receive a response. Among the unions that have not yet accepted the government's offer are the Seamen and Waterfront Workers Trade Union, the Public Services Association and the Postal Workers Union.