EconomyLocal NewsNews Unions prep for public sector pay talks by Emmanuel Joseph 26/02/2026 written by Emmanuel Joseph Updated by Shanna Moore 26/02/2026 3 min read A+A- Reset CTUSAB General Secretary Dennis De Peiza. (HG) FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 497 The major trade unions said Thursday they are ready to enter long-awaited pay talks with the government, as both sides prepare for a crucial new round of wage and salary negotiations in the coming months. The Barbados Workersโ Union (BWU), the National Union of Public Workers (NUPW) and the umbrella trade union body, the Congress of Trade Unions and Staff Associations of Barbados (CTUSAB), have all reported being in a state of readiness or near readiness to negotiate for better pay and working conditions for their members. But while facilitating the conclusion of the job regrading in the public service โ which will influence the talks with government โ the BWU is expressing concern about the length of time the exercise is taking. General secretary Toni Moore told Barbados TODAY: โThe Executive Council of the Barbados Workersโ Union is well advanced in much of the internal preparatory work that is required for the upcoming round of salary and wages negotiations and stands ready to engage with the government at the earliest opportunity.โ โAs agreed, the union allowed for the uninterrupted completion of the job evaluation exercise, recognising that its findings will have direct implications, not only for wages, but also for wider terms and conditions of employment.โย โLike the workers we represent, the BWU is concerned about the length of time the process has taken. We remain hopeful that the report, once delivered, will be of a standard that allows the parties to move forward without any further unnecessary delay.โ You Might Be Interested In Crystal Beckles-Holder, 2nd runner up in regional competition GUYANA: Body of child found after gold mine collapses Barbadians asked to help with return tickets for Haitians The BWU therefore awaits the presentation of the job evaluation report before finalising its submissions for the revision of the collective agreement with the government, she said. The NUPW said its process for fresh talks on a new wages, salaries and conditions of employment contract has already started. General Secretary Richard Greene told Barbados TODAY: โThe National Council of the NUPW has approved a committee to formulate recommendations and proposals for increased salaries and wages; and this committee is about to start its work. The committee is broad-based. The intention is to look across the public service, to see where there are deficiencies, but also where there are opportunities for improvement in terms and conditions for public officers.โ These benefits would include not only salaries and wages, but allowances and other terms and conditions. He said he was putting public workers on notice that the process has started internally, and the union is moving ahead on the instructions of the National Council and on his advice. CTUSAB said the umbrella organisationโs internal mechanism for preparing for such negotiations is already gearing up for the upcoming talks. General Secretary Dennis De Peiza told Barbados TODAY: โWe are guided by economic research; and we are at the stage where our research paper has been commissioned. And as soon as that paper is presented to us by our expert, we will then fine-tune our position. โBut we already know some of our conditions of service that we will bring to the table. Some are ongoing and some, we want to further attend to; then the actual dollar figures will come out of our research study and so forth. We have our parameters set upโฆ we have certain understandingsโฆ that will come out of the economic researchโฆ because you have to have some basis on which to make an argument.โ On Wednesday, the government laid in Parliament its Estimates of Revenue and Expenditure for the 2026โ27 fiscal year, setting out what the Mia Mottley administration expects to spend โ including wages and salaries for public officers โ and how much it expects to earn. Emmanuel Joseph You may also like Prolonged water outages leave rural folk struggling 01/04/2026 Experts hail Barbadosโ removal from global watchlists 01/04/2026 Barbados seeking to improve on last yearโs CARIFTA Games performance 01/04/2026