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JTA Workers Protest Over Outstanding Payments Amid Ongoing Wage Dispute

Kingston
JTA Workers Protest Over Outstanding Payments Amid Ongoing Wage Dispute

The Jamaica Teachers’ Association (JTA) is facing growing pressure from its employees as workers represented by the Bustamante Industrial Trade Union (BITU) staged a protest over alleged unpaid salary-related benefits and stalled negotiations.

The demonstration unfolded on Monday outside the JTA’s Church Street headquarters in downtown Kingston, where workers dressed in black and carried placards to voice frustration over issues they say have remained unresolved for nearly a decade.

According to BITU Vice-President Rudolph Thomas, the dispute centers on the JTA’s alleged failure to provide details regarding incremental and seniority-based salary increases dating from 2017 to the present.

Thomas said the union has identified several discrepancies and has repeatedly sought clarification from management concerning the calculations tied to the payments.

The conflict has reportedly intensified due to delays in concluding wage and fringe benefit negotiations covering the 2024 to 2026 period. Thomas also pointed to what he described as prolonged delays in implementing a market realignment exercise that should have taken effect from 2024.

BITU represents security personnel, clerical employees, accounting staff, and ancillary workers employed by the JTA.

Thomas stated that employees have become increasingly dissatisfied with what the union considers management’s failure to address the outstanding matters, arguing that the delays amount to unfair compensation practices.

He further warned that the JTA workers protest could escalate if immediate steps are not taken to establish firm timelines for resolving the dispute. Thomas also claimed that commitments previously made during discussions at the Ministry of Labour have not been honoured.

Syndicated from McKoy's News · originally published .

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