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Harvard Law School pays courtesy call

Harvard Law School
Photo Credit: Looptt

Senior Fellow at Harvard Law School pays courtesy call to Minister of Social Development and Family Services.

The Honourable Cherrie-Ann Crichlow-Cockburn, Minister of Social Development and Family Services, recently received a courtesy call from Janet E. Lord, Senior Fellow at Harvard Law School Project on Disability and Independent Consultant, Disability & Inclusive Development, at the Ministry’s Head office in Port-of-Spain.
Ms. Lord was accompanied by the US Embassy Public Affairs Officer AJ Jagleski and Cultural Affairs Assistant Gail Seebaran. Also present was the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry, Jacinta Bailey-Sobers.
Discussions were focused on a range of disability issues. It was thereafter agreed that there were opportunities for further collaboration on the issues discussed.
The Minister was pleased to facilitate the brief exchange of information and the Ministry looks forward to more detailed discussions and collaboration with this valuable resource, as it seeks to address the issues confronting persons living with disabilities in Trinidad & Tobago.

Sewage System To Be Upgraded

BWA
Minister of Agriculture, Food Fisheries and Water Resource Management, Dr. David Estwick. (FP)

Major upgrades are on the cards for Barbados’ sewage system.

Minister of Agriculture, Food, Fisheries and Water Resource Management, Dr. David Estwick, made the announcement this morning, as he addressed the official launch of the Barbados Water Authority (BWA) and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) Renewable Energy Project. It was held at the BWA’s headquarters at the Pine Commercial Estate, St. Michael.
Noting the sewage issues which surfaced recently, Dr. Estwick highlighted the need to modernise the system.
“I am moving aggressively to rebuild our sewage systems. They’re all old, archaic and failing. This is the reality…and sometimes you can imagine the level of development that would’ve happened on the south coast since the 1990s, when that South Coast Sewage Plant was built. So, we’re now facing infrastructure issues and future capacity issues,” he said.
It is against this background that Dr. Estwick also revealed plans to recycle waste water, as he pointed out this is a critical reason why the BWA’s Waste Water Division was created.
“One of the things I am going to thrust going forward is to modernise our waste water and waste systems development, and this is the reason why we moved to set up a Waste Water Division, which is the way you have to deal with this… Separate waste water from potable water,” Dr. Estwick stressed.
The Minister outlined how recycling waste water could help to boost the water supply, pointing out that Barbados is a water scarce country and could no longer depend on rainfall to replenish the aquifers.
“The critical element of that is this, we have to stop moving to treat water and sending it out in the ocean for the fish.  We’re moving to treat our sewage and our effluence to a tertiary standard, and then introduce aquifer recharge,” Dr. Estwick explained.
“No longer will we be sending three million gallons of water into the ocean that can be brought back to land to supplement the water in our aquifers,” he stated.
According to Dr. Estwick, the time has come for “critical and urgent” strategies to be implemented to enhance the water and sewage infrastructure, as well as the operations of the BWA.

How to build back better after a Hurricane

#RESILIENTCARIBBEAN

How to build back better after a hurricane with the next one a few months away.

Imagine relocating the entire population of your country in the face of a colossal hurricane and two months laterstill not being able to get back home. Now imagine spending several nights in a shelter and taking a stroll the next morning only to find what you used to call community, city or country reduced to an apocalyptic scene.
This is no fiction. Irma and Maria, two back-to-back category 5 hurricanes, the most powerful ever recorded in the Atlantic, swept across the Caribbean in September, cutting a swathe of destruction, taking lives, devastating infrastructure and severely damaging the economies of small climate-vulnerable countries.
Entire islands were decimated, like Barbuda, the smaller of the two-island state of Antigua and Barbuda, and Dominica, both Members of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). Anguilla and the British Virgin Islands were also devastated while The Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands were severely affected. Haiti and St Kitts and Nevis also suffered damage. All of the islands are Members or Associate Members of CARICOM.
The island of St Marten, divided between Sint Maarten, a constituent country of the Kingdom of Netherlands and St Martin, a dependency of France as well as Cuba and the Dominican Republic were impacted, in addition to Puerto Rico and Florida, in the United States.
The principal economic sectors of tourism and agriculture have been very significantly affected, the resulting loss of jobs compounding the anguish of the loss of homes. In-depth damage assessments in Barbuda and Dominica are still on going, but initial estimates indicate recovery costs could be more than US$3billion.
These hurricanes were a game changer. Not even in the Caribbean, which is the most natural disaster-prone Region in the world, had anything like this been experienced before. The occurrence of successive category 5 hurricanes signals a dangerous change in the intensity and frequency of climate-related storms, and heralds the advent of a new normal.
The number of severe hurricanes is projected to increase by 40 percent, if global temperatures rise by 2°C and up to 80 percent should they rise by 4°, according to a World Bank report entitled “Turn down the Heat. With the resulting sea-level rise, this will have devastating effects on all Small Island Developing States (SIDS), but particularly those in the Caribbean, this study confirms.
Since the hurricanes hit, the Governments of Antigua and Barbuda and the Dominica along with the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) have been working on the ground hand-in-hand with UN teams, co-led by the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) with an urgent task. Also on the front line have been other CARICOM Member States and specialised Institutions, France and its departments in the Caribbean, Venezuela, the United Kingdom, the United States and the International Committee of the Red Cross. Women and men are working around the clock to build back better. They need more resilient communities that are ready to cope with the next hurricane season only seven months ahead.
But rebuilding from the increased frequency and intensity of natural disasters will be impossible without international support, particularly considering the overwhelming climate-vulnerability and crippling debt burdens of these vulnerable SIDS.
The needs are urgent. But there are three crucial opportunities at hand. First, the Conference of The Parties (COP23) in Bonn, Germany, 6-17 November, is a vital moment for the world to come together and act on climate change. Then, on 21 November at the UN headquarters in New York a UN-CARICOM pledging conference provides the opportunity for the world to support affected Caribbean countries as they build back better, especially considering that they have been bearing the brunt of climate change without having contributed to the problem.
Finally, now, more than ever, it is fundamental that the international community rethinks traditional criteria for concessional development financing based primarily on GDP per capita. These affected nations are being denied full access to such financing based on being ranked as Middle Income countries. The criteria must take into account the economic and environmental vulnerability of SIDS.
Now is the time to act. If Caribbean countries are to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030 they need urgent accessing to financing—including for climate change adaptation. In view of such urgent needs, UNDP’s Caribbean Human Development Report “Multidimensional Progress: human resilience beyond income”, launched a year ago, called for improved standards that take into account multiple indicators, or well-being measurements beyond income alone.
If the world has vowed to eradicate poverty by 2030 it is crucial to invest in boosting communities’, countries’ and entire regions’ resilience in the social, economic and environmental fronts.
Building back better is an essential part of this effort. We invite the world to support the Caribbean countries through global action on climate and during the CARICOM-UN High Level Pledging Conference: Building a More Climate-Resilient Community. We must all act now, before it’s too late.

Ministers safe after Tropic Air plane crash

Tropic Air

Acting Prime Minister Hon. Patrick Faber and Minister of Agriculture Hon. Godwin Hulse Safe After Plane Crash in Placencia.
This morning at approximately 8:45 am, Acting Prime Minister Hon. Patrick Faber along with Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries, Forestry, the Environment and Sustainable Development and Immigration Hon. Godwin Hulse were enroute to Punta Gorda Town via a Tropic Air flight.
Upon takeoff from the Placencia Airstrip, the left landing wheel made contact with a passing vehicle that had managed to bypass one of the lowered barriers. The impact caused the Tropic Air vessel to plunge into the sea right off the coast of Placencia not far from the airstrip. A rescue team was sent out and all passengers on board the plane, including the pilot, were transported safely back to land. Preliminarily, there are no reports of any sustained injuries.

CARICOM Secretariat Staff Talent Celebrations

CARICOM

The CARICOM Secretariat will once again showcase the talent of its staff in the annual Staff Talent Celebrations from November 25-27, 2015. This year’s activities will be held under the theme Creativity for a Green Caribbean Community.
Your media house is cordially invited to attend the opening ceremony.
Event:             Opening Ceremony for CARICOM Secretariat Staff Talent Celebrations
Speakers:        Assistant Secretary General in Charge of Foreign &Community Relations
CARICOM Secretariat, Ambassador Colin Granderson
Venue:            Large Conference Room, CARICOM Secretariat
Time:               2:00pm    
Date:               20 November 2017
Following the Opening Ceremony there will be an opportunity to view the exhibits on display.

SVG-Toronto Support Groups Reaches Out To Diamond

SVG-Toronto Support Group

A number of school and computer supplies were over officially to the staff and students of the Diamond Government School from the overseas-based SVG-Toronto Support Group on Thursday, 16th November.
The supplies came about as a result of collaboration between the Regional Integration and Diaspora Unit (RIDU), and the Group.
On hand to witness the event was newly appointed Director of RIDU, Mr. Allan Alexander. Mr. Alexander said that RIDU intends to be more engaging with the Vincentian Diaspora, which continues to show interest in contributing to communities throughout Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
READ MORE: Air Canada to increase flights to Barbados
He also urged the staff and students to make full use of the supplies.
Founding Member of the SVG-Toronto Support Group, Mr. Evans Bernard John, said that the group is very active and wholly committed to giving back to this country. He noted that as recent as last week, they donated Canadian $2,400.00 to the School for Children with Special Needs.
Mr. John added that the Five year old Organisation has also collaborated with the Lions Club South of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and has shipped barrels with food items to be donated to 12 needy families for this Christmas season.
Acting Principal of the School, Ms. Hannah Harry, said that the items are welcomed at this time and the staff and students will ensure the items are used and incorporated in the classrooms. Harry thanked RIDU and the SVG-Toronto Support Group for the contribution.
The Regional Integration and Diaspora Unit continues to urge Diaspora Organisations to become engaged in the development of small communities and by extension Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.

The World Bank Group Caribbean Recruitment Drive

World Bank

The World Bank Group is launching a recruitment drive aimed at increasing the number of Caribbean professionals in its workforce.
A career with the World Bank Group offers a unique opportunity for exceptionally talented individuals with a passion for international development to contribute to solving some of the world’s most pressing problems. Bank staff work with governments, civil society groups, the private sector, and others in developing countries around the world, assisting people in all areas of development, from policy and strategic advice to the identification, preparation, appraisal, and supervision of development projects.
This commitment to hire Caribbean nationals reflects the World Bank Group’s senior leadership’s commitment to a diverse workforce in which Caribbean nationals can play a key role in fighting poverty and increasing shared prosperity.
The World Bank Group is currently seeking qualified professionals to fill various roles within the World Bank Group located in Washington, DC or one of our regional offices.
Minimum qualifications for entry-level positions include a Master’s degree plus 5 years of relevant professional experience. For mid-career professionals, the minimum requirements are a Master’s degree plus 8 years of relevant professional experience.
Ideal candidates for these positions must have a demonstrated capacity for strategic thinking, the ability to conduct dialogue on relevant development policies and priorities, and fluency in English. Fluency or proficiency in other languages, in particular, Arabic, Chinese, French, Portuguese, Spanish, or Russian is considered a plus.
Applications must be submitted through the links below by Dec. 8, 2017. Only those candidates who are shortlisted will be contacted for interviews before or on January 5, 2018.
Available positions include:
Senior IT Officer, Disruptive Technologies/Innovation
IT Officer, Disruptive Technologies/Innovation
Financial Officer
Operations Officer
Senior HR Specialist
Strategy Officer
Senior Economist
Lead Economist
Data Analyst

National Awards Committee seeks nominations

National Awards Committee

The National Awards Committee is hoping to get a greater number and high level of quality of submissions from Saint Lucians for persons deserving of national recognition.
The Awards Committee met with the local media on Monday, Nov. 13, at the Office of the Prime Minister in order to educate persons about the awards, the criteria, and how they could participate.
Chairperson of the committee, Sen. Mauricia Thomas-Francis, while addressing the press launch explained that over the years several deserving Saint Lucians have been duly recognized under this program.
“Consistent with our mandate to ensure that deserving persons are continuously nominated for recognition we have embarked on a series of public relations activities which will run over the next six weeks,” Mrs. Francis explained.
She noted that the committee has already embarked on some public awareness activities to ensure that nominations are received.
“We have issued over 500 nomination forms to various organizations, to the social clubs, to mother and fathers groups and to the various embassies,” she said, adding: “I want to implore Saint Lucians to pay particular attention to the good work that is done by youth in the community. We have been plagued with a lot of social ills and we believe our young people who have fallen into the trap of those social ills, through these awards can get an opportunity to see role models and be inspired to do the right thing. This will go a long way in developing a better society,” Thomas-Francis said.
Mr. Wilbert King, Assistant Chair of the Committee explained that over the past few years, the National Awards Committee appointed by the Governor General has endeavored to encourage citizens and organizations to submit nominations for candidates who satisfy the eligibility criteria.
“While the number of nominations for the past two years has shown some increases, the committee is yet to register the expected level of response from the general population,” he noted.
Mr. King sought to allay any misconceptions about the awards.
“The committee wants to make it very clear to all that there is no discrimination with respect to creed, ethnicity, colour, socio-economic status or gender. The essential factor in its consideration for selection for the grant of an award is how far the nominee has satisfied the stated criteria for eligibility. We are looking for persons who have over the years done or acquired certain qualities and have also exhibited certain qualities to show that they are very national in their approach and whatever they have acquired is of national importance or significance.”
Mr. King also stated that the committee wants to help the public with regard to the proper filling out of the forms. The public awareness drive will also educate the public about the accurateness and relevancy of information contained in the forms.
He added: “I believe the onus is on all of us to encourage Saint Lucians to nominate persons who they believe can qualify for the receipt of honors and awards. The thinking that the awards are for a certain class of people must be dispelled.”
National Awards Committee Secretary, Mrs. Irene St Croix, explained the various awards and classes. They include The Saint Lucia Cross, The Saint Lucia Medal of Honour, The Saint Lucia Medal of Merit, Saint Lucia Les Piton Medal.
“It is an honour and a privilege to receive a national award and we want Saint Lucians to truly embrace and treasure national awards,” she said.
Nomination forms are available online and can also be obtained from post offices and libraries. The deadline for submission is Dec. 12.
Submissions are possible online at http://recognition.govt.lc/. Additional nomination forms are available at http://governorgeneral.govt.lc/honors-and-awards

Grenada's Fiscal space under threat

Grenada's fiscal space under threat by Public Sector Unions' demands.

Grenada’s Fiscal space under threat by Public Sector Unions’ demands.

The Government Negotiating Team and the two public sector unions, the Public Workers Union and the Grenada Technical and Allied Workers Union, resumed negotiations on the one-off payments earlier today, November 17.
The Unions had previously rejected the additional sum of $650 in one-off payments. In an attempt to reach a settlement and to ensure that there is no breach of the Fiscal Responsibility Act, Government had reconsidered its offer, by re-prioritising its expenditure, including reducing the sum it had originally allocated for the regularisation of temporary workers in the service, and adjusting its one-off offer upwards to $700 across the board or $750 for workers in the system who have worked for more than three years and $650 for those who have worked for less than three years.
In the face of Government’s latest offer, the unions made no adjustment to their demand of 1500 dollars.
It must be understood that under Government’s new offer, a lesser number of workers would be regularised within the service, as the funds for financing regularisation and other Human Resource matters will now have to be shifted to finance the increased one-off payment to public workers.
The Government Negotiating Team urges the Trade Unions to settle this matter on the basis of this last offer because the fiscal space does not allow for any more than that, and any breach of the Fiscal Responsibility Law can very well result in the loss of grants and other reliefs to the tune of hundreds of millions to the State of Grenada.
The Government Negotiating Team finds it necessary to restate that in addition to wages and salaries, a sum of over $106 million dollars have already been paid to public officers between the periods 2013 to 2017.
Furthermore, in regards to Government’s ongoing commitment to pension restoration and reform, Government has placed on the table a proposal to the unions to solve this long-standing issue; cognizant that in doing so, Government will have to commit additional hundreds of millions of dollars, which will also have to be financed by the taxpayers of Grenada.
The Government Negotiating Team again appeals to the union leadership and the rank and file to accept this absolute offer.
Any additional demand to this present one-off offer will breach the Law and place the country’s finances in jeopardy; therefore hindering Government’s ability to meet the needs of all the citizens of Grenada.

Changes in Petroleum Prices – Nov. 2017

Pumping Gas

The General public is hereby informed that, effective, Saturday November 18th, 2017, the retail prices of petroleum products (Gasoline, Diesel, Kerosene and LPG {Cooking Gas}) in the State of Grenada will be as follows:

Grenada:

Products Old Price New Price
Gasoline $14.47/IG $14.937/IG
Diesel $13.53/IG $13.96/IG
Kerosene $8.06/IG $8.30/IG
L.P.G (Cooking Gas):
20 lbs Cylinder  $42.00 $40.00
20lbs Cylinder (Petrocaribe)* $37.00 $37.00
100 lbs Cylinder $199.60 $203.25
Bulk $2.10/lb $2.10/lb

Carriacou

Products Old Price New Price
Gasoline $14.65/IG $15.12/IG
Diesel $13.71/IG $14.14/IG
Kerosene 8.25/IG $8.49/IG
L.P.G (Cooking Gas):
20 lbs Cylinder $49.00 $49.00
20lbs Cylinder (Petrocaribe)* $46.00 $46.00
100 lbs Cylinder $222.60 $226.25
Bulk $2.10/lb $2.10/ib

Petite Martinique:

Products Old Price New Price
Gasoline  $9.15/IG  $9.62/IG
Diesel  $8.21/IG  $8.64/IG
Kerosene  $8.25/IG  $8.49/IG

The new Retail Prices are computed based on the average FOB costs: that is; (Ex-refinery prices), for the period, 16th October, 2017 to 14th November, 2017.
Consumers are encouraged to immediately notify the Price control/Consumer Affairs Unit in the Ministry of Finance of any instance of overpricing at telephone number 440-1369.

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