Cream for them, no milk for you

Jeffrey Curmi, the former brigadier now CEO at Transport Malta on a package of €115,000, knows how to milk the system; but he’s decreed TM’s 1000+ employees should get no more free milk with their tea and coffee.

It’s all about socially responsible savings, you know. With public debt about to surpass the €9 billion mark, the finance minister needs to cut expenditure by €200 million.

Clyde Caruana says he still needs to identify where €100 million are to come from. Even a few hundred euros a year, which is what the milk costs, will make a difference. Yes, right.

You’d think they’d begin with the Cream Team and the Gravy Train, not the milk.

Among the crème de la crème of Tagħna Lkoll are 14 CEOs earning over €100,000. They include Kurt Farrugia, running Malta Enterprise, on a package of €180,000 and who, last year, issued direct orders totalling €1 million.

There’s Jonathan Cardona (€146,000), who’s following the smashing success he made of the cash-for-passports scheme with a fantastic job at Enemalta, which hasn’t published its accounts in four years and is said to be hiding losses of tens of millions of euros.

Will Enemalta be asking for the money it lost in the Montenegro wind farm scam? Or for the €5 million bill it “absorbed”, which should have been paid by the Electrogas consortium? Will it continue to have Konrad Mizzi’s childhood friend, David Galea, on its consultants’ list? In Mizzi’s time, Galea was on a €12,000 monthly retainer.

The Cream Team includes Carmen Ciantar (€163,000), the health minister’s lead canvasser who also heads the Foundation for Medical Services. By 2024, Ciantar will have pocketed €700,000 of taxpayer money. The Auditor General found her contract “irregular” — will the finance minister be revisiting its terms?

Don’t hold your breath. The public debt didn’t begin to soar to dangerous levels yesterday. Up to a few months ago, the government was issuing cheques to everyone and making promises to Air Malta employees that, it now says, will not be honoured.

Caruana is still making exceptions for the passengers on the gravy train. Ian Borg has his own personal photographer, hired at three times the normal rate, on a full-time basis — an unprecedented arrangement signed off by the foreign ministry’s permanent secretary.

Last year, when rumblings about the public debt were already loud, the Labour operative Nigel Vella was recruited by Malta Enterprise, on a package of €55,000, but he’s never worked a day there. He promptly went on leave, with the right to return under any government. It’s good to know that Kurt Farrugia’s €180,000 package is giving us value for money.

Since the general elections, Air Malta employees have been uncertain about their future, even though they have indefinite contracts and a signed assurance from the government that they could retain their pay packages elsewhere in public service.

Labour propagandist Karl Stagno Navarra, however, is secure. He was rarely seen around the office; his definite contract ended this summer. But he’s been transferred to the OHSA. The only question is whether he’s retained his package of €45,000.

I wouldn’t wager that Caruana’s savings will come from cutting any gravy train allowances, which so far have routinely been approved without too many questions asked.

Expect the cuts to come from elsewhere. The University of Malta has had €1.1 million cut from its budget. Given its fixed costs, that cut is likely to bite into research money.

To give some sense of proportion, in 2020, the then education minister, Owen Bonnici, made a PR meal of the news that UM was getting an extra €600,000 for research.

And so he should have. The research had direct benefits for the economy, energy and welfare: robots to help the elderly, storage devices for offshore wind farms, a cure for motor neurone disease and early detection of regional earthquakes.

When money is cut from such research, it’s not just the researchers who suffer. It’s the reputation of the university and the CV of the students who attend it. It’s your life in old age, it’s jobs and the environment.

The cuts are double the size of the funds that Bonnici boasted of in 2020. Knowing this was on the horizon, the government still spent at least €1.3 million on Film Week (the actual cost is still secret), whose Film Awards were boycotted by leading players in the industry.

Oh, but what’s €1.3 million? The Film Commissioner Johann Grech blew off €600,000 on travel and accommodation alone.

Labour’s electoral programme makes over a dozen promises to fund research, including commitments to attract researchers from abroad. We’ll see how many of those promises to fund multiple new centres will be kept.

Hopefully, it won’t just be the research mentioned in  Pledge 366 — “research” on turtle-dove bird routes that draws on hunters’ participation. Or the kind of “research” funded by Heritage Malta — when it authorised a restaurant on a prime site in Mdina, in peak season, at the bargain basement rate of €50 per day — in the name of “market research”.

Back to the finance minister’s missing €100 million. Where can he get them from?

If only Caruana could travel back in time. There’s the €40 million in excise tax that the Electrogas consortium was told it didn’t have to pay — coincidentally, 11 days after Daphne Caruana Galizia’s assassination.

Maybe Caruana can renege — as he’s done with Air Malta employees — on another agreement with Electrogas: that the €84 million payout (after the gas pipeline comes into effect) will be tax-free. And that the €30 million to be paid to acquire the concern will not, after all, be VAT-free tax deductible.

He could insist Steward Health Care pay the €37 million owed in VAT as well as the millions owed in social security contributions. And maybe he could stop paying hand over fist for a contract that has not been honoured. By the end of 2021, we had already paid €230 million — all the budget cuts needed and then some.

Will Caruana do any of this? He can’t. The interests of the gang in government are in conflict with the national interest. So far, it looks like he first looks after the gang.

Until that changes, it’s cream for them. The rest of us get creamed.

                           

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16 Comments
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Winston Smith
Winston Smith
2 years ago

This country’s politics of unchecked greed has transformed Malta into the likes of a dystopian Orwellian novel. What makes matters even worse is that there is no opposition, no outcry, no angry mobs, so the gangster capitalists have no motive to change their ways.

D M Briffa
D M Briffa
2 years ago
Reply to  Winston Smith

Dead right. The Opposition are missing a huge opportunity. They should be telling the electorate that a vote for them means an end to the scandalous waste, the creaming off, the iced buns, and so on. And an end to tax evasion. With those measures the annual deficit could be brought under control. It’s never going to happen under Labour.

KLAUS
KLAUS
2 years ago

We have so much [P]olitical [L]ooting that there is hardly no milk for our children.

With their often good education, our children then later also do not want to look at a poorly paid slave job with the looters and go to a serious country

We can only support this with a heavy heart.

What we can do, no we have to do:

We need a strong UNITED OUTSIDE PARLIAMENT OPPOSITION.
All together! – For the future of our children.

Gabriel
Gabriel
2 years ago

Edwina Licari, the travel companion and dear friend of disgraced Joseph Cuschieri enjoys a 100k euro salary from MFSA. Shameful.

Francis Said
Francis Said
2 years ago

There is a code of dishonour amongst the corrupt PL and it’s employees. Make hay whilst the sun shines. There is also another codicil in this code of dishonour. We are in power and taxpayers’ funds are ours to spend as we please and nobody has the right to question us.
If there is anyone who still believes that the PL is pro worker then he/she has been completely brainwashed.

Lorna
Lorna
2 years ago

Direct orders remain the order of the day. Nexia BT, Adrian Hillman, Gordon Cordina, Vincent Marmara enjoyed millions of euro from Malta Gaming Authority under the helm of Yorgen Fenech’s friend, Joseph Cuschieri.

S.Borg
S.Borg
2 years ago

The workers political part they say.

David
David
2 years ago

What a corrupt government. Besides that most of this cream team are unqualified and not competent for the job. Some of them do not even have an A level standard of education. Shame.

Etienne
Etienne
2 years ago

Minister Caruana should start to give examples with his close Cabinet friends. They have an annual allowance of € 7000 instead of having a second car. Most of them opt for this option and should use their private car for unofficial out of office errands.The official ministerial car should be locked up when not used officially. Instead they slide off the GM plates and uncover the normal car plates while using it for their unofficial errands. Is that misappropriation of public funds by the Cabinet members??????

Churchill
Churchill
2 years ago

Why are they scrounging on tea and milk when Transport Malta just bought a new FLEET of BMW motorcycles ? They could have opted for cheaper motorcycles

viv
viv
2 years ago

Paraphrasing T. Dalrymple –
… the purpose of communist propaganda is not to persuade or convince, nor to inform, but to humiliate …
The sooner liberals get this, the better.

Carmelo Borg
2 years ago

Well said prosit

Joseph Tabone Adami
Joseph Tabone Adami
2 years ago

Min ikomplu jtuh biex jiffanga, u min igaghluh jittallab ghal ftit halib.

Veru kaz ta’ min ‘mejjet fis-sakra u min mejjet ghal qatra’ u li min ‘ghandu jkomplu jzidulu malli ghandu u min m’ghandux jittehidlu sahansitra dak il-ftit li ghandu’.

Johnny
Johnny
2 years ago

Hope these questions are asked directly to minister Caruana when parliament reconvenes after the summer recess!

carlos
2 years ago

There’ no place for the honest In mafiamalta, the more corrupt you are the
better.

carlos
2 years ago

The only way out of this miserable corrupt mafialand, is to have a decent oppososition, more than half the population either did not vote or voted for a change. THE OPPOSITION OWES US AN ANSWER. CALL PEOPLE TO DEMONSTRATE – AND YOU SHOULD LEAD BY EXAMPLE SHAME ON THIS MAFIA LOT WHO HAVE RUINED OUR CHILDREN’S FUTURE.

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