Elizabeth Gonzales
Tobago Correspondent
The verbal abuse allegations made against Secretary of Health, Wellness, and Social Protection and Deputy Chief Secretary Dr Faith Brebnor, following a meeting with Public Health Services Department workers on Tuesday morning, have taken a new turn. The worker she allegedly cursed is dismissing the claims made by his colleagues.
Transport foreman Michael Augustine said his colleagues blew the matter out of proportion. He insisted that Brebnor’s use of obscene language was not meant as an attack on him or disrespect to the others but was part of a casual conversation. He said if his colleagues misunderstood her tone, they should have asked for clarification instead of going to the media.
“You know when you’re talking casually to somebody sometimes you’ll use a word to express yourself ... right like that. It was not cursing anybody,” Augustine explained.
“I can’t feel offended because I was not called out and cursed. She said something using words to express how important it is.”
He said Brebnor spoke in a down-to-earth manner and had asked the workers to express themselves freely.
“They blew that out of proportion because they did not understand the level in which the person was speaking,” Augustine said.
However, other workers claimed Brebnor used an expletive when they asked about overtime payments and asked if they wanted her to “pull the money from up my a**.”
At that point, some of the workers said they walked away. Another worker intervened to caution Brebnor about her language and the way she spoke to Augustine during the meeting.
Augustine said he saw no issue with it and believes the focus should be on the plans Brebnor shared to improve working conditions and infrastructure rather than the approach and tone she used. He felt he was not disrespected and did not think an apology was necessary.
The meeting focused on upcoming projects in Signal Hill, including construction of a task force building, outfitting of the mechanical workshop, and finalisation of the vector lab.
Augustine’s colleagues, however, are standing by their claims, insisting that obscene language in the workplace is a terminable offence. They said if the situation had been reversed, employees would have been fired immediately.
One worker asked: “Does this mean it’s okay for us to give her some good bad word in her a** on her next visit? Let me know nah.”