Background
Her father was a businessman, and she says her childhood was a prosperous and happy one. But while in her Sixth form, her father"s business began to fail.
General Secretary Government Officers
Her father was a businessman, and she says her childhood was a prosperous and happy one. But while in her Sixth form, her father"s business began to fail.
Helene Davis-Whyte holds an associate degree in business studies and professional certificates in trade union studies and labour economics.
She received a Bachelor of Science degree in human resource management from the University College of the Caribbean (UCC) in 2006.
She is also a vice-president of the Jamaica Confederation of Trade Unions. Helene Davis was one of four children. She dropped out of school to go to work and support the family.
"Sometimes I left home without breakfast.
I never had the lunch money and when I got home, I was not sure that I would see dinner," she has said. Although unmarried, she moved in with a sister (who was also a single parent) to make ends meet.
In the early 1980s Davis-Whyte worked at the Kingston and Saint Andrew Corporation. "I was probably one of the most anti-union persons" working in local government, she admitted.
During a meeting with then-general secretary East. Lloyd Taylor, Davis-Whyte became the speaker for the group.
Her co-workers were so impressed with her representation of their issues that they elected her a delegate to JALGO, and she became increasingly involved in union work. Davis-Whyte was elected vice-president of JALGO"s Municipal Branch, and in 1984 was elected the national union"s education officer In 1995, after Taylor"s retirement, she was elected general secretary (the union"s highest office), and was re-elected in 1998, 2001 and 2004.
Her nomination was a tumultuous one, and nearly caused a riot on the convention floor.
During her tenure as union leader, Davis-Whyte has opposed the flexible work-week for reducing workers" hours, pushed for reorganization of public welfare services, and urged a collaborative approach to policy making in which unions would participate in commissions, boards and advisory bodies in order to alleviate the impact of austerity measures.
But when a new mayor promised to lay off members of her department, she and other workers decided to ask for JALGO"s assistance.