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FM
Former Member

The letter writer below was a strong PPP supporter and advocate.  There are thousands of stories like these that can be told.

 

This is how the PPP agencies work as a norm.

 

NIS benefits suddenly stopped

APRIL 10, 2015 · BY STAFF WRITER · 0 COMMENTS   

 

Dear Editor,

My dad died just over two years and the process for my mom to get his NIS benefits was smooth and relatively easy. Then suddenly late last year the benefits ceased.

After attempts to get the matter dealt with from over here were not fruitful, my mom travelled from New York to Guyana in December and was put through many hoops as she was forced to deal with one issue after another. Almost four months hence she’s still waiting.

About two weeks ago I called the NIS in Georgetown and was informed that the paperwork was in order and was being processed.

I was also given a phone number for a manager, but numerous calls went unanswered as each time the phone line was busy – regardless of what day and what time the call was placed. That number is 225-3268. Incidentally some of the numbers on the NIS website are incorrect or not working.

It is indeed ‘a riddle wrapped in an enigma’ that the NIS would take almost four months to resolve a matter of benefit payments owed.

What is even more puzzling is that for almost two years the benefits were paid yet suddenly problems developed even though nothing changed.

The bottom line is that my dad served the sugar industry for almost fifty years and the NIS benefits are what he earned, not a handout or a donation being solicited. One has to indeed wonder whether there is some truth to the view being bandied about that this ‘process’ is aimed at frustrating beneficiaries to give up.

Will the NIS please put the lie to this ‘rumour’?

Yours faithfully,

Annan Boodram

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Why should they pay poor PPP supporters their NIS when the Skeldon, Providence stadium, Berbice Bridge and Marriott fiascos must be funded.

 

After all the PPP must represent the "working" class, the ones whose hard earned dollars fund their overseas based retirement assets, in case ungrateful people vote them out of office, and threaten to seize their Guyana based assets..

FM

"One has to indeed wonder whether there is some truth to the view being bandied about that this ‘process’ is aimed at frustrating beneficiaries to give up."

 

And when you do give up, an insider would take the money and destroy the records that you exist.  They will tell you, we don't have records and place the burden on you to prove that you do, and that's impossible to do.

FM
Originally Posted by Jay Bharrat:

"One has to indeed wonder whether there is some truth to the view being bandied about that this ‘process’ is aimed at frustrating beneficiaries to give up."

 

And when you do give up, an insider would take the money and destroy the records that you exist.  They will tell you, we don't have records and place the burden on you to prove that you do, and that's impossible to do.

Well truth be told is that this culture began under the PNC and grew worse under the PPP.

 

It will be interesting how much zeal they will apply in eliminating this entrenched behavior should they win.

FM

I met a lady whose husband died 5 years ago and she still can't get her husband's benefits.  And these poor people go back and forth for years with no resolution, or no solution in sight.  They don't know how to navigate the system and the PPP has no mechanism, such as when the PNC had local offices, that would help you when you have problems.

 

Many of these people are in the sugar industry.  Not even the union helps them. 

FM

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