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Bajan Brief – Miss Violet: Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Bajan Brief

Good morning. Miss Violet here. Retired schoolteacher, Bridgetown. Forty-one years in the classroom. I know when people are not doing their homework. Let us proceed.


THE FARM LABOUR SITUATION: READ THIS CAREFULLY

Canada is requesting returning workers rather than new recruits. This sounds like good news. I want you to think about it more carefully. If Canada only wants back the people who already went, then the programme is no longer expanding access — it is recycling it. The same families benefit repeatedly. The young person who has never been does not get the opportunity. This is the definition of a programme that has stopped doing what it was originally designed to do. I have seen this happen with school clubs. I have seen it happen with civic organisations. It happens when no one is watching the intake numbers. Someone needs to watch the intake numbers.

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Bajan Brief – Bajan Bugle: Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Bajan Brief

Good morning from Bridgetown. Barbados is observing the global situation with its customary composure, noting several domestic developments that require attention, and declining to panic about any of it publicly.


FARM LABOUR SCHEME: FEWER NEW RECRUITS, SAME PROGRAMME

The overseas farm labour scheme is still active but sending fewer new recruits to Canada. The reason is interesting: Canadian employers are increasingly requesting returning Barbadians — workers already familiar with agricultural operations — rather than first-timers. On one reading, this is a compliment. Barbadians are so reliable that Canada wants the same ones back. On another reading, it means fewer Barbadians are accessing the economic opportunity the scheme was designed to provide for the first time. The programme continues. The pipeline narrows.

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