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The_Honourable wrote:LOL...
Come on now... we ALL... ALL ALL ALL knew OWTU/Patriotic was not going to get that refinery. Yes they got played during elections, dangle that carrot in front of their faces and got walked straight into a wall of embarrassment.
They called Rowley bluff in 2018 and bid on the refinery, i'll give them that but even then Rowley's intention was to give that refinery to another entity.
De Dragon wrote:The_Honourable wrote:LOL...
Come on now... we ALL... ALL ALL ALL knew OWTU/Patriotic was not going to get that refinery. Yes they got played during elections, dangle that carrot in front of their faces and got walked straight into a wall of embarrassment.
They called Rowley bluff in 2018 and bid on the refinery, i'll give them that but even then Rowley's intention was to give that refinery to another entity.
So, another 2 years to find a second buyer? What a bunch of idiots we have in charge in this PNM GORTT. Two years? Preferred bidder status is almost guaranteed to get through, but only the PNM would bestow that on an entity, then say they not up to snuff. Maybe the hands of the PNM were not going to be sufficiently greasy enough?
Redman wrote:De Dragon wrote:The_Honourable wrote:LOL...
Come on now... we ALL... ALL ALL ALL knew OWTU/Patriotic was not going to get that refinery. Yes they got played during elections, dangle that carrot in front of their faces and got walked straight into a wall of embarrassment.
They called Rowley bluff in 2018 and bid on the refinery, i'll give them that but even then Rowley's intention was to give that refinery to another entity.
So, another 2 years to find a second buyer? What a bunch of idiots we have in charge in this PNM GORTT. Two years? Preferred bidder status is almost guaranteed to get through, but only the PNM would bestow that on an entity, then say they not up to snuff. Maybe the hands of the PNM were not going to be sufficiently greasy enough?
What the hell changed?
Below for the concise recap
https://www.caribbean-council.org/trini ... des-union/
He said Cabinet decided on Patriotic since it had the most “reasonable” response and bid more than Klesch which offered nothing, and Beowulf which offered US$7.6m over fifteen years. He also told the media that it was Cabinet’s decision to defer Patriotic’s payment “as it would guarantee the refinery’s restart if it wasn’t burdened by the need to come up with that cash immediately” and meant that the company “could get on with the business of refurbishing and restarting”.
Noting that restarting the refinery was a high priority because of the contribution it made to the Republic’s GDP, he said that without the previous high level of debt servicing and overstaffing government believed the new operators would have a good chance of success.
Addressing media concerns that the refinery was going to a union whose members in the past had been blamed for Petrotrin’s failure, Imbert said that the union had been able to arrange to partner with one of the largest fuel traders in the world on marketing their product and were linked to well established financial institutions in terms of financiers. The details however of who is behind the union remains confidential. Imbert later said that a memorandum of understanding that Patriotic will sign with Trafigura, the Singapore-based commodity traders would only be for marketing. Trinidadian media reports suggest that the OWTU will shortly name its financing sources.
Rovin wrote:
Maybe the financier got fedup and issued a deadline of his own which neither party could agree to, or manage.? Like I said, preferred bidder public dress down is rare and indicates a process which came off the rails, if it ever was on the rails to begin with that is.
Redman wrote:Maybe the financier got fedup and issued a deadline of his own which neither party could agree to, or manage.? Like I said, preferred bidder public dress down is rare and indicates a process which came off the rails, if it ever was on the rails to begin with that is.
I don’t think that the finance side would rush to give a deadline....globally liquidity is high so they would wait...
At face value ...
Roget said that they met the financing side....1 and 2 of the 3 conditions Khan spoke about.
If the issue is 3.....then is today’s position different from the day the selection was made?
Cuz title is a major issue...and it’s GORTT responsibility.
death365 wrote:y is trinituner so anti union? unions all over the world fight for workers rights and better conditions of employment. with out unions fighting there would be no:-
Sick leave
causal or occasional leave
paid vacation
standard working hours
standarized job descriptions
stopping child labour
osha legislation
etc etc etc
death365 wrote:y is trinituner so anti union? unions all over the world fight for workers rights and better conditions of employment. with out unions fighting there would be no:-
Sick leave
causal or occasional leave
paid vacation
standard working hours
standarized job descriptions
stopping child labour
osha legislation
etc etc etc
death365 wrote:y is trinituner so anti union? unions all over the world fight for workers rights and better conditions of employment. with out unions fighting there would be no:-
Sick leave
causal or occasional leave
paid vacation
standard working hours
standarized job descriptions
stopping child labour
osha legislation
etc etc etc
death365 wrote:y is trinituner so anti union? unions all over the world fight for workers rights and better conditions of employment. with out unions fighting there would be no:-
Sick leave
causal or occasional leave
paid vacation
standard working hours
standarized job descriptions
stopping child labour
osha legislation
etc etc etc
Redman wrote:Honorable, thank you for that link up.
toyolink wrote:Our worst enemy with all these going-ons is time.
The refinery just keeps on ageing and timelines for cost effective and efficient recommissioning may soon start to enter the realm of non- viability to investors.
Our domestic inability to commit to processes and strategies with time being the essence continues to avoid us from getting our head above drowning conditions.
Patriotic will first appeal/beg for a second chance and if this fails litigation, including injunctions are going to fly.
Individuals with hopes of being re-employed must be suffering the onset of acute disappointment.
toyolink wrote:Our worst enemy with all these going-ons is time.
The refinery just keeps on ageing and timelines for cost effective and efficient recommissioning may soon start to enter the realm of non- viability to investors.
Our domestic inability to commit to processes and strategies with time being the essence continues to avoid us from getting our head above drowning conditions.
Patriotic will first appeal/beg for a second chance and if this fails litigation, including injunctions are going to fly.
Individuals with hopes of being re-employed must be suffering the onset of acute disappointment.
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