{"id":6861,"date":"2013-01-18T06:41:16","date_gmt":"2013-01-18T11:41:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.ict-pulse.com\/?p=6861"},"modified":"2013-01-18T06:43:54","modified_gmt":"2013-01-18T11:43:54","slug":"tenable-standoff-bwu-lime-barbados","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ict-pulse.com\/2013\/01\/tenable-standoff-bwu-lime-barbados\/","title":{"rendered":"How tenable is the standoff between the BWU and LIME in Barbados?"},"content":{"rendered":"

The current standoff in Barbados between the incumbent telecoms company, LIME, and the country\u2019s largest workers union, is discussed.<\/em><\/p>\n

\"YoungFor those of you who regularly read our news roundups<\/i><\/b><\/a>, you might have realised that there has been a highly contentious matter in Barbados between the one of its largest workers unions, the Barbados Workers\u2019 Union (BWU), and the incumbent telecoms company, LIME. Earlier this month, LIME fired 97 employees. Negotiations with the BWU reached an impasse, and as of last week, the union threatened an island wide strike, which was expected to happen this week.<\/p>\n

However, Barbados Prime Minister, Freundel Stuart, summoned both BWU and LIME to a meeting on Wednesday 16 January, in what might have been a last ditch effort to resolve this standoff. Thanks to Prime Minister Stuart\u2019s intervention so far, the BWU has postponed the strike, but with a follow-up meeting scheduled for today, Friday 18 January, in order to continue negotiations, this post highlights the issues and aims to provide another perspective on the matter.<\/p>\n

BWU vs. LIME: what is the problem?<\/h3>\n

From all reports in the local newspapers in Barbados, it is perhaps fair to surmise that there is an uneasy tension between the BWU and LIME. In February 2012, the BWU was threatening industrial action to secure a new collective agreement with LIME, and over 100 of the company\u2019s employees had staged a sickout, which forced the closure of some branches across the island (Source: Antigua Observer<\/a>). For this current matter, the publicly available facts are as follows:<\/p>\n