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Numb3r4 wrote:I wanted to ask, we know or have a fairly good idea of the unemployment amoungst engineers, technicians, and doctors, but what about accountants and lawyers?
Numb3r4 wrote:I wanted to ask, we know or have a fairly good idea of the unemployment amoungst engineers, technicians, and doctors, but what about accountants and lawyers?
Dizzy28 wrote:Numb3r4 wrote:I wanted to ask, we know or have a fairly good idea of the unemployment amoungst engineers, technicians, and doctors, but what about accountants and lawyers?
There is a glut of lawyers in the market.
My sister in law has an interview with a large PoS law firm today actually and she is out with her LEC 2 years now. A significant portion of her graduation class are all employed in non legal related work as well.
RBC offers VSEP to service delivery staff
RBC is preparing to downsize even further as they have offered voluntary separation programme (VSEP) packages to eligible employees of their service delivery teams. This was confirmed via email late Wednesday evening by director of sales effectiveness, strategic and corporate communications of Caribbean Banking, Jacqueline Taggart out of Toronto, Canada. It has not yet been confirmed how many employees will be affected.
Taggart said because of the way that banking has evolved the bank has to think differently about managing their clients needs.
"This means that transaction volumes that once required the work of many and took days or weeks to complete, can today with the advantages of digitally supported self-service and other technical innovations be finished with fewer resources in a matter of hours. This is why we have offered eligible employees the voluntary separation programme. As always, we are working with employees to ensure they have the right information to make informed decisions about their future."
Hope they think long and hard when they dip their fingervaiostation wrote:
K74T wrote:
bluefete wrote:K74T wrote:
Berger is now owned by ANSA McAl. Do the math.
shake d livin wake d dead wrote:Our labor minister is the worseeeeeeee...when she was at PSA, she mouth bigger than ever...now she just rock back skinning
rspann wrote:shake d livin wake d dead wrote:Our labor minister is the worseeeeeeee...when she was at PSA, she mouth bigger than ever...now she just rock back skinning
She real good looking though.
matix wrote:rspann wrote:shake d livin wake d dead wrote:Our labor minister is the worseeeeeeee...when she was at PSA, she mouth bigger than ever...now she just rock back skinning
She real good looking though.
Just as sexy as Marlene
rspann wrote:Any one ,once its with a big stone.
rspann wrote:Any one ,once its with a big stone.
Robinson-Regis: 13,000 vacancies at government ministries
Julien Neaves
LEADER of Government Business Camille Robinson-Regis has reported more than 13,000 vacancies at government ministries. She was responding to a question in the House Wednesday on behalf of the Minister of Public Administration.
She said based on the information from 22 ministries there are 6,505 vacancies in the permanent establishment as at March 2019, and the number of vacant contract positions as at March 2019 was 6,517.
Caroni East MP Dr Tim Goopesingh asked if there were any attempts by the Public Administration Ministry to fill these vacancies, and if so, when. Robinson-Regis said the ministry is always working with the Director of Personnel Administration to fill vacancies and this is an ongoing process.
Earlier in an urgent question, Robinson-Regis responded to a query about reports that workers of the Reforestation Programme had not been issued salaries for the past three months. She said the ministry had requested funding to pay the workers from the Finance Ministry and the ministry was working on approval. She added all pay sheets had been processed.
Naparima MP Rodney Charles asked the reason for the delay and Robinson-Regis replied that it was due to documentary approval which was sent to the Finance Ministry as a result of the existence of “so-called ghost workers.” She said these ghost workers have troubled the programme for an inordinate length of time and an audit was necessary to ensure contractors had hired the people they said they hired.
Sixty-eight employees of the Chaguaramas Development Authority (CDA) will be sent home in the coming weeks as the authority seeks to reduce its expenditure and tackle its $88 million debt.
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