Sunday 3 January 2021
Ex-Lennox Petroleum workers, led by OWTU chief labour relations officer Lindon Mendoza, protest in front the home of the company s CEO Wayne Persad at Sumadh Gardens, Vistabella on Thursday last week.
On Thursday morning, OWTU chief labour relations officer, Lindon Mendoza and ex-Lennox petroleum workers held a silent protest in front of the home of Lennox Petroleum CEO s residence, Wayne Persad, in Sumadh Gardens, Vistabella.
31/12/2020 - Marvin Hamilton
The Oilfield Workers’ Trade Union (OWTU) chief labour relations officer, Lindon Mendoza, has summed up the responses from the management of Lennox Petroleum Services Ltd (LPSL) to ongoing protests as ole talk.
The long-standing retroactive increments dispute between Lennox Petroleum Services Ltd and a group of former workers, who have been protesting for the past three weeks, took a different turn when the Express came into possession of a document confirming the company had appealed an Industrial Court order handed down in favour of the ex-employees.
This transpired yesterday as the aggrieved workers, led by the Oilfields Workersâ Trade Unionâs chief labour relations officer Lyndon Mendoza, picketed the Sumadh Gardens, San Fernando, home of the companyâs chief executive officer Wayne Persad for the second time in the space of a week, having done so on Christmas Day.
Ex-Lennox Petroleum workers protest at CEO’s house again
Saturday 26 December 2020
Ex-Lennox Petroleum workers explain their vexation to officer s, outside the premise of Wayne Persad s home on Christmas day. - CHEQUANA WHEELER
ONCE again, ex-Lennox Petroleum Services Ltd workers have staged a protest at the front of the home of the company’s CEO in Sumadh Gardens, Vistabella. They also did this last week.
Over the past month, these former employees have held protests over the company’s alleged refusal to pay over 300 people a total of US$9.6 million. The company has since called these statements “factually untrue,” and said a labour dispute litigation process is going on in the courts.
OWTU: Time for talk done, pay up
Monday 21 December 2020
Chants of we need our money were heard by ex-Lennox petroleum workers and their families at a nearby carpark of the company s Princess Margret Street, San Fernando office last Thursday during a protest.
THE Oilfields Workers Trade Union (OWTU) has called on management of Lennox Petroleum Services Ltd (LPSL) to obey a court ruling and pay its ex-workers outstanding sums owed.
The ex-workers have been engaged in protests outside the company’s San Fernando compound claiming they are owed US$6.5 million by the company. The company has called on the workers to stop engaging in these protests. But in a press release issued on the weekend, the OWTU accused the company of showing disrespect to the workers.
Lennox Petroleum protest resumes in San Fernando
Thursday 17 December 2020
OWTU chief labour relations officer Lindon Mendoza spoke with press on behalf of ex-Lennox petroleum workers who staged a protest at a carpark of the company s Princess Margret Street, San Fernando office last Thursday. - Marvin Hamilton
The management of Lennox Petroleum Services Ltd (LPSL) has called on former workers to immediately cease and desist their ongoing protests, which the company considers illegal.
The call came on Thursday, when ex-workers simultaneously staged their latest protest outside LPSL at Princess Margaret Street in San Fernando from 10 am.
For the past few weeks, the ex-workers, who are members of the Oilfield Workers’ Trade Union (OWTU), have been accusing LPSL of failing to pay outstanding payments.