A Trade Unionistโs Journey with Car Ownership
There was a time in Jamaicaโs not-too-distant past when owning assets such as a car was more than a convenience. It was a public marker of stability and success, one that remained out of reach for the majority.
Growing up in rural communities between Portland and St Mary, veteran trade unionist, Leonard Sewell, remembers that reality clearly. Back then, car ownership, in particular, was rare but it was something he dreamt of achieving one day. In those days, people who owned cars were in a class by themselves.
โWhen I was growing up in Highgate, it was the established families, the ones with recognised โbrandโ names who owned cars. There were two families that had motor vehicles that didnโt even want their children to talk to us or walk with us from school,โ he recalled, noting that those early experiences shaped his outlook on work, discipline and progress.
Decades later, Mr Sewell achieved that dream but for him this personal achievement reflected determination and persistence rather than status or seeing himself as better than others.
โOwning a car now makes me feel like Iโm a rich guy in Jamaica because what I paid for my car today, they would have paid like $25,000 for their vehicle,โ he said. โWhen I go to my district now, the people say to me, โMr. Sewell, we feel pleasedโ.โ
Getting to this point, however, was not easy. As a young man, Mr Sewell left school at a time when economic opportunities were limited and upward mobility uncertain.
โAfter leaving school, I learnt bodywork at an autobody shop, but I couldnโt get along with the welders, so I asked my father to help me get a job at Highgate Food Products where I worked for a number of years,โ he shared.
He became a permanent staff member at the factory on February 1, 1988, moving up the ranks from machine operator to senior departmental operator, a supervisory role, within three years. However, in 1996, he was made redundant during a company restructuring.
โDuring 1992 to 1996, I was a union delegate. After I lost my job that same year, the union brought me on as an organiser, and thatโs where my trade union career took off,โ he shared highlighting that his involvement in the industrial relations ย movement has since placed him at the centre of national conversations around workersโ rights, fair wages and financial inclusion.
โAs a trade unionist, I lobby for workers. Iโm involved in contract negotiations; if employees are unfairly dismissed or suspended illegally, I handle that too. Iโve worked with employees in construction, agriculture, health, postal services, security, education, utilities,โ he noted, adding, โItโs good when you can help people in this fashion. Sometimes itโs not about the money, itโs about helping others.โ
Mr Sewell has owned multiple cars since his professional setbacks and for his 61st birthday, he made his biggest upgrade yet to an SUV, financed through a JN Bank unsecured loan. He had accessed the loan digitally via the JN Financial Groupโs ONE JN Passport app. The ONE JN Passport, available in the app stores and online, enables users to provide their personal information once to the JN Group, then use it multiple times to access financial services, such as JN Bank unsecured loans, credit cards or everyday transactional and regular savings accounts. In time, it will also offer access to the services and products of other companies in the JN Financial Group.
โIt was so easy and economical,โ he said pointing out how the app made things quicker by cutting out the usual paperwork, long wait times and back-and-forth with the bank. โI would encourage others like me, looking for financial support, to go to JN Bank because JN is the peopleโs bank.โ
A long-standing JN member, Mr Sewell said his latest vehicle fits perfectly with his lifestyle, while helping him meet his professional demands, especially on off-road terrains.
โIf Iโm going into the cane fields or the banana fields, I donโt have to worry because itโs really a good vehicle. This vehicle enhances my everyday movement and living,โ he said.




