DLP describes new social agency as ‘mere rebranding’ of services

The Democratic Labour Party (DLP) accused the government of masking old inefficiencies under a new name, a day after the newly launched Social Empowerment Agency (SEA) opened its first office, dismissing it as repackaging rather than reform of social services.

The government on Wednesday formally launched the SEA, an amalgamation of existing social service departments, which officials say is intended to transform how assistance is delivered to Barbadians. The first client centre was opened at Six Roads, St Philip, with additional locations planned for Bentham in St Lucy, Sunset Crest in St James, and Southern Plaza in Oistins.

But DLP candidate for St Philip North, Simon Clarke, said: “The opening of a Social Empowerment Agency office in St Philip has been presented as progress. The Democratic Labour Party remains unconvinced.

“Barbadians in need are not asking for new signage or ceremonial openings. They’re asking for timely assistance, clear decisions, and dignity in the process.”

Clarke argued that the government has failed to explain how the new agency will reduce delays, improve accountability, or fix “long-standing failures in social service delivery”.

Dismissing the initiative as largely symbolic, Clarke warned that rebranding existing structures without addressing capacity issues would not result in improved outcomes for vulnerable citizens.

“Rebranding is not reform,” Clarke stressed. “Declaring social workers ‘first responders’ without clear resources, staffing, or measurable targets does not empower anyone. It shifts expectations without support.”

The DLP would judge the SEA strictly on its results, not on optics or public relations, he added.

“Until this government can demonstrate real improvements in service delivery, this opening remains symbolic, not substantive,” Clarke said.

Drawing a contrast with the DLP’s time in office, Clarke said social support was previously treated as a serious responsibility rather than a political opportunity.

He said: “Welfare was never reduced to a communications or PR strategy. Assistance was meant to reach people quickly, quietly, and respectfully.”

Clarke also pointed to persistent complaints from applicants, including long wait times, inconsistent decisions, and what he described as bureaucratic indifference.

“While government celebrates a new sign on an old building,” he said, “families facing hardship do not need another press conference. They need food vouchers approved, rent assistance processed, and case officers empowered to act.”

He added that after seven years in office, the administration could no longer deflect responsibility for the shortcomings within the system.

“The problems confronting our social services are not abstract. Applicants have complained for years about long wait times, inconsistent decisions, and an absence of compassion,” Clarke said. “After seven years, the government cannot credibly blame anyone else. These failures belong squarely to its record.” 

The SEA merges the services of the Welfare Department, Child Care Board, National Assistance Board and National Disabilities Unit.

 

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