by Jean
Lowrie-Chin | Jamaica Observer column | 31 March 2014
I
remember one of my UWI classmates deciding to take a household worker job for a
summer, just to see what the experience would be like. “Never again!” she declared
when her curious classmates questioned her about her stint. My friend had a
choice but thousands of others don’t.
Shirely Pryce - photo from Jamaica Gleaner |
This is why it is important that we heed the call of Shirley Pryce,
Executive Director of the Jamaica Household Workers Union for
the Government to ratify the International Labour Organisation (ILO) Convention
189, ‘Advancing Decent Work for Domestic Workers’.
An excellent media campaign to
promote the call was developed by Keishagay Jackson of WMW Jamaica (formerly
Women’s Media Watch), with the help of Judith Wedderburn of Friedrich Ebert
Stiftung (FES) in Jamaica and Dr Leith Dunn of the Institute for Gender and
Development Studies at UWI, Mona. It was launched at an event hosted by the
Ministry of Labour and Social Security earlier this month.
Shirley Pryce has been a stalwart
for Jamaica’s household workers, developing her association into a union which
has increased its membership from 1,200 to 3,600 over the past year.
"We are now registered as a
trade union,” she noted. “We moved from five chapters to 11 chapters
islandwide. We have been doing capacity building and institutional
strengthening … the domestic worker is finally coming out of the shadows. We
are now a force to be reckoned with worldwide. It is therefore, a great opportunity
to say to the Government of Jamaica to ratify the ILO Convention.”
She continued: "While many
domestic workers work in adequate surroundings and are paid in line with the
Government's directives on the minimum wage, far too many do not experience the
level of decency and respect that should be extended to every human being. Protection
for domestic workers is long overdue. People turn a blind eye to the domestic
worker issue. We have had enough hurt and it is time for us to be heard.”
PM Simpson Miller congratulates Shirley Pryce |
Professional folks sometimes get so
caught up in the daily rush, taking children to school, getting to the office,
and working late, that we sometimes do not even properly see the individuals
who help us to stay sane by being a steady and trusted presence in our homes. Kudos
to Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller for acknowledging the support of her
housekeeper in her victory speech after the last General Elections.
It is time that we all examine our
attitude towards our household workers – we carry a lot of baggage, sometimes
totally unaware of the level of disrespect we display. I remember a Sunday
School teacher relating to me that she asked her students if God loved them
more than He loved their household worker – sadly the answer was a resounding
‘Yes’. We need to be careful that we do not saddle our children with such
ignorant generational baggage. What part of 'Teach us true respect for all' do we not understand?
We should applaud the efforts of chief
technical officer Errol Miller at the Ministry of Labour for his efforts to
have the Convention ratified. In a JIS report, Dr Leith Dunn said the baseline
study found that most of the laws needed are in place but some should be
amended to ensure consistency.
Dr Dunn also pointed out that one of
the main findings is that there is no system of registration for household
workers in Jamaica, noting that the Economic and Social Survey of Jamaica
estimates that there are between 58,000 to 100,000 such workers. Therefore the
JHWU could become one of Jamaica’s most powerful unions. Shirley Pryce has held
many workshops over the years, training household workers to be efficient and
ethical. In turn, she would like to see employers recording terms of engagement
for household workers – the Ministry could assist with online forms so that
busy employers could ensure that NIS and NHT registration is done.
Congratulations to Shirley Pryce for
her valiant efforts on behalf of Jamaica’s household workers, which was
recognized last month when she was elected as the only Caribbean representative
on the Board of Directors of the worldwide Association for Women's Rights in
Development (AWID). We should know that many leading Jamaicans were nurtured by
mothers who labored in other people’s homes to keep their children fed and in
school – much respect is due.
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