ROADS FROM HELL – San Francique residents demand action

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

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San Francique residents, their MP Davedranath Tancoo and councillor Doodnath Mayrhoo set up a press conference in the street near a landslip to highlight the deplorable condition of roads in the area on Tuesday. Photo by Marvin Hamilton

OROPOUCHE West MP Davendranath Tancoo and Avocat/San Francique North councillor Doodnath Mayrhoo called on Works and Transport Minister Rohan Sinanan to ensure that a longstanding landslip at Santa Cecelia Trace in San Francique is fixed.

They warned Sinanan that if no relief came to residents affected by the landslip, there could be protest action on his doorstep.

Addressing the media at the site of the landslip, with some of the residents around him, Tancoo said, “This government continues to mamaguy the people of South Trinidad.”

He opined that Santa Cecelia Trace was perhaps “the worst part of the roads of our network, we already have a bad network throughout Trinidad and Tobago.”

Tancoo compared the state of the road to the sea conditions at the Dragon and Serpent’s Mouths at the northern and southern ends of the Gulf of Paria respectively.

“We have nowhere to pass. Vehicles have been stranded, embanked. People have had to come and push off vehicles when they were stuck on the roadway. It is absolutely unacceptable.”

Tancoo recalled that since Sinanan visited the area in May, nothing had happened to date.

Tancoo also showed copies of letters between the Rural Development and Local Government Ministry and the Siparia Regional Corporation about one house along Santa Cecelia Trace which had suffered structural damage because of the landslip.

He claimed there was an attempt to classify that house as a ruinous structure so the Works and Transport Ministry would not have to compensate its owners for damages caused by the landslip.

San Francique residents walk through a damaged portion of Pluck Road on Tuesday. Photo by Marvin Hamilton

According to Section 176 of the Muncipal Corporations Act, an engineer assigned to a local government corporation can classify a structure which is unfit for use or occupation. Such structures are defined as ruinous. Directives can subsequently be given to the owners of such structures to demolish, secure, repair or rebuild part or all of that structure.

Tancoo and Mayhroo said the road where the landslip had occurred falls under the purview of the Works and Transport Ministry and not the Siparia Regional Corporation.

Tancoo wondered how Government could want homeowners whose properties have been damaged by the landslips to pay property tax.

“What tax are you going to come and charge them?”

Tancoo lamented the difficulties faced by residents to get access to any kind of public transport because of the deterioriating condition of the road.

“How are they going to compensate people who now have to travel, walk half a mile this way or that way to get a taxi?”

Tancoo also expressed concern about businesses in the area which have lost customers because of the poor condition of the road.

“These are professionals, business people and home owners who have been victimised because of the Government’s insincerity. They are abandoned.”

Tancoo was convinced that reasonable efforts by the residents to appeal to Sinanan for help were either exhausted or very close to that stage.

“It is clear that the minister is not taking on the normal protest, the appeals and begging of the community.”

The deteriorating condition of the road rules out options such as blocking it or burning tyres on it, as forms of protest

Tancoo said, “The only thing that would make sense is to take the protest to the minister to incovenience him to wake him up so he does his job.”

Mayhroo agreed.

Discussions will be held with the residents to determine whether they should protest outside of Sinanan’s home or his office in Port of Spain.

“Mayhroo said there were 50 residents “who are marooned in their homes because they cannot get out with their vehicles.”

He was concerned that if any of the residents along the trace required urgent medical attention, help would not reach them in time.

When contacted, Sinanan was unfazed by Tancoo and Mayhroo’s threats of future protests.

“At the end of the day, Mr Tancoo and Mr Mayhroo are politicians. They are doing what they have to do.” Sinanan said there are processes and procedures which guide the works that his ministry undertakes. “We are doing what we have to do.”

Sinanan said the PNM will not repeat a situation which happened under the former UNC-led People’s Partnership coalition government where proper procedures were not followed and there were issues with contractors not being paid.

He identified Pluck Road as one of a few roads in the San Francique area which the ministry has responsibility for and for which there is a work programme. The ministry is not responsible for the maintenance of traces. Sinanan said those types of roads are managed by local government corporations.

When he visited Santa Cecelia Trace in May, Sinanan said work to repair the road and others in the area would begin soon.

Sinanan acknowledged residents’ plight. But he said fixing deteriorating roads was not a simple process.

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WATCH: Saint Lucia Upgrading Vocational Training For Marginalised Youth – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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A sod-turning ceremony took place Monday for a new building complex in connection with a project to upgrade vocational training for marginalised youth in Saint Lucia.

It’s a building for the catering and hospitality section of the Centre for Adolescent Renewal and Education (C.A.R.E).

An India-UNDP partnership is funding the project.

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Source: Office of the Prime Minister/ SLT

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El polvo del Sahara continuará hoy

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Aguaceros dispersos se observaron a través de la noche sobre el norte y este de Puerto Rico durante la noche, dejando algunas décimas de pulgada de lluvia, pero buen tiempo se observó en el interior y oeste de Puerto Rico.

Sin embargo, estuvo mayormente nublado sobre las islas locales. Las temperaturas mínimas estuvieron en los altos 70s a bajos 80s en las áreas bajas, mientras que las áreas altas observaron temperaturas en los altos 60s a medios 70s. El viento estuvo del este a 10 mph o menos, con ráfagas cerca de los aguaceros.

El polvo del Sahara continuará hoy, pero disminuyendo en concentración para la tarde. Una baja presión en los niveles altos está causando un cielo mayormente nublado, cual se combinará con un aumento en la humedad. Esto causará aguaceros dispersos en la mañana en el este de Puerto Rico. Aguaceros de dispersos a numerosos con tronadas aisladas se pronostican en la tarde.

El suroeste de Puerto Rico puede tener las cantidades de lluvias más altas, posiblemente causando algunas inundaciones urbanas y de pequeños riachuelos. Las temperaturas estarán en los medios a altos 80s en las áreas bajas con índice de calor llegando de 97 a 102 grados en algunas áreas. El viento estará del este a cerca de 15 mph con ráfagas ocasionales y variaciones por la brisa marina.

A través de las aguas regionales, se espera oleaje generalmente de 5 pies y viento de hasta 15 nudos. Pero algunas áreas aisladas pueden tener brevemente vientos de hasta 20 nudos. Existe un riesgo moderado de corrientes marinas para la mayoría de las playas de Puerto Rico.

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Reportan explosión en subestación de LUMA en Santa Isabel tarde en la noche

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Una explosión en una subestación de LUMA Energy se registró en la noche del martes en Santa Isabel.

“Brigadas de LUMA están trabajando arduamente para atender a una interrupción de servicio afectando a clientes de Santa Isabel y zonas adyacentes. Compartiremos actualizaciones a través de nuestras redes sociales a medida que estén disponibles”, escribió LUMA Energy en sus redes sociales.

Según LUMA Energy, los sectores sin servicio eran: Barrio Jauca, Las Ollas, Barrio Velázquez, Urbanización Paseo del Mar, Playita de Jauca, Residencial Rincón Taíno y Urbanización Santiago Apostol.

Alrededor de 6,000 clientes estaban sin servicio en Santa Isabel.

Según la empresa encargada de la transmisión y distribución de energía eléctrica, la otra situación de explosión en una subestación en Jayuya “fue resuelta”.

Luma Cerrando con broche de oro en el día de hoy! Otra subestación fuera!
Según nos informan es personal de Luma en una subestación en Santa Isabel. pic.twitter.com/odKRMnKsHx

— Angel Figueroa Jaramillo (@jaramilloutier) July 12, 2022

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Paternity leave coming for public sector workers | Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News | Loop News

Minister of Finance and the Public Service Dr Nigel Clarke says paternity leave is closer to becoming a reality for government employees.

Speaking on the Government’s restructuring of public sector compensation at a press conference on Tuesday afternoon, Dr Clarke highlighted that it goes beyond wages and salaries to also take into account benefits like pension and terms and conditions such as leave entitlements.

Minister Clarke said the Government intends to update the Public Sector Staff Orders of 2004 to introduce paternity leave “for the first time in the public service, for fathers of newborns, for a specific time and on specific terms to be finalised.”

A 2020 online survey conducted by the Hugh Shearer Labour Studies Institute at the University of the West Indies Open Campus, in collaboration with the Jamaica Civil Service Association, showed that more than 90 per cent of public servants in Jamaica would support the idea of paid paternity leave in the public sector.

Minister Clarke also said on Tuesday that the Andrew Holness-led administration intends to increase maternity leave and provide leave for adoptive parents.

“Today, I intend to similarly signal the direction of this reform as it pertains to maternity leave, paternity leave and family leave. Coming out of the compensation restructure, and in reviewing the terms and conditions of service, the GOJ has decided to update the terms of maternity leave and to introduce a provision for paternity leave and leave for adoptive parents in the public service. All of these are components of total compensation,” he said.

He said the government intends to update the Public Sector Staff Orders of 2004 to increase maternity leave from 40 days to three calendar months.

The Government also intends to update the Public Sector Staff Orders of 2004 to introduce family leave for adoptive parents who are bringing a new child into the home.

Dr Clarke said to give effect to these changes the appropriate circular will be sent out to members of the public service by September 30.

In the meantime, the Minister of Finance and the Public Service said the Government has completed first-round consultations with all public sector unions and bargaining groups and is progressing with the second round of consultations.

However, he did not give details on the discussions despite the matter of teachers not being happy with the compensation offer and that the Jamaica Teachers’ Association (JTA) has not heard from the government in months.

The finance minister said that he would respond directly to the JTA.

On the matter of pension, Dr Clarke said the Pension Act was amended in 2018 to make public sector pensions equitable, fair, simple to administer, and sustainable.

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Over 15,000 people arrested in Jamaica in 2021 — survey | Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News | Loop News
Loop News

8 minutes ago

A total of 15,277 people were arrested in Jamaica in 2021, a sharp increase of 19.1 per cent when compared with 2020.

Category one crimes, which include murder, rape, aggravated assault, robbery, and break-ins, accounted for 16.2 per cent of all arrests made during the year.

The statistics are contained in the 2021 edition of the Economic and Social Survey Jamaica (ESSJ).

According to the survey, which is an annual publication of the Planning Institute of Jamaica, category one crimes saw an overall decline of 6.0 per cent last year. However, murders increased by 10.6 per cent.

The survey noted that as with previous years, males continued to be the main perpetrators of crime with 96.5 per cent of those arrested being male. It said the number of victims of category one crimes decreased by 6.3 per cent with males accounting for 71.6 per cent of the 6,313 victims.

Meanwhile, almost one-fifth of the category one crimes continued to be registered in the parish of St Andrew, while St Catherine accounted for 15.1 per cent and Kingston 14.3 per cent.

Parish level reductions in the number of category one crimes reported ranged from a low of 0.8 per cent in Clarendon to a high of 32.1 per cent in St Elizabeth. The number of such crimes reported in Manchester increased by 20.9 per cent.

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Nickerie strijdt tegen ziekte van Weil

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Arjen Stikvoort PARAMARIBO — Er zijn negen bevestigde gevallen van de ziekte van Weil in district Nickerie. Van veertien

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UDP writes GG onSen. Montejo’s appointment

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

BELIZE CITY, Fri. July 8, 2022Today, UDP Chairman Michael Peyrefitte informed the public that the party has sent a letter to the Governor-General, Dame Froyla Tzalam, in which they formally call for PUP senator Collet Montejo to vacate his Senate seat. The party is asserting that he was disqualified from sitting in the upper house after having taken an appointment as the Field Supervisor on the Re-districting Task Force – a key national role that he alone will be occupying. The Minister of Public Service and Constitutional Reform, Henry Charles Usher, said late last month that, based on his interpretation of the law, Senator Montejo’s appointment is permissible. The Governor-General thus finds herself caught between two conflicting legal interpretations—one being offered by the current administration, and the other by the Opposition.“In essence, I’m asking the Governor General to make a call to the Prime Minister and say, ‘Prime Minister, this particular senator that you asked me to appoint is acting contrary to the Constitution of the country. I am asking you, Sir, to please replace that senator with somebody else.’ If the Governor General cannot get that done, then our options are open. If he says, ‘Look, I am no longer taking or accepting that position with the Elections and Boundaries Commission, I will not be the supervisor for the re-districting process,’ then my argument is over, then he can remain in the Senate. But he has to give up one of them, he cannot keep both,” Peyrefitte said during a recent interview.The UDP chairman reiterated today while being interviewed that the Constitution makes it clear that he must vacate his seat, since his responsibility will involve directly the revision of the new electoral list.“He is a member of the Senate and Section 63 of the Constitution is very clear. It says that a person has to vacate his or her seat if they act in any office that: one, has any response that involves any responsibility for or in connection with the conduct of any election; or two: any responsibility, and this is the critical part, F2, any responsibility for the compilation or revision of any electoral register,” Senator Peyrefitte said. In an interview in late June, however, Minister Henry Charles Usher had stated that, in his layman’s view, Senator Montejo’s appointment is acceptable. “Mr. Montejo is not in charge of elections; he is not revising any election list. He is merely a technical part of a task force appointed by the Elections and Boundaries Commission, so, in my layman reading, I don’t see it as being a conflict,” he had said.A press release issued on June 9 said Montejo would be responsible for all fieldwork involved in the gathering and providing of information regarding the various features of each constituency – including, among other things, “the distribution of the population across the various divisions in accordance with section 90(2) of the Constitution.”UDP Chairman Peyrefitte, however, has pointed out that Montejo is the only person appointed to carry out this key task and will be in a key role in the compilation of the register, exactly what the provision is aimed at preventing.He explained, “So when you decide that you are going to be a key person in the re-districting of constituencies and electoral offices, you are essentially going to determine how the register is compiled. Honorable Collet Montejo will be in a key position to tell you how many people remain in Lake-I, how many people remain in Collet, how many people will remain in Albert, or whether or not they will combine divisions. That’s a key, key role, and what the Constitution envisages is that members of the Parliament should stay away from the conduct of elections or having anything to do with the compilation of registers or the determination of voters lists or anything of the sort.”He lamented the fact that the only field supervisor appointed by the task force for the entire country happens to be the Deputy Secretary-General of the PUP, Montejo, and says he took no pleasure in bringing the Governor General into the situation.“It gives me no pleasure to write a letter like that, but as the Opposition, we have a responsibility to make sure that the government upholds the law and follows the law, especially the constitution of the country. Now you have a situation where there is only one field supervisor that’s going to be appointed for the redistricting exercise that the country is going through. Now it is bad enough that the country decided to choose the Deputy Secretary-General of the People’s United Party to be the field supervisor. You can’t tell me that there are other people who cannot do that job in a professional manner without even being questioned as to whether or not there is any political bias,” Peyrefitte said.He is calling on the PUP to select an appointee for the role who is not so extensively tied to any political party, or for Montejo to resign if he indeed goes on to fill that key role. “What the Constitution envisages is that members of the National Assembly should stay away from the conduct of elections or having anything to do with the compilation of registers, determination of voters list of anything of the sort, so like I said, it is bad enough that he is the Deputy Secretary-General of the PUP. It is unconstitutional what they are doing and they need to pick someone who does not have any of those connections, and we are saying that if he insists on taking that job, if he insists on taking that position then he needs to resign from the Senate,” he said.

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Motorcyclist killed in Boom Road RTA

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

HeadlineMotorcyclist killed in Boom Road RTA

Kirk Ramclam, Jr., 27, was hit by a vehicle and died shortly after on the scene. 

BELIZE CITY, Mon. July 11, 2022  A business analyst and manager of a Belize City contact center lost his life this afternoon in a traffic accident after his motorcycle collided with a car on the Boom-Hattieville Road.Kirk Ramclam, 27, reportedly died on the scene at 2:00 this afternoon, shortly after the accident occurred at Mile 2 ½ on that road. He was traveling on his motorcycle when it collided with a grey Ford Escape being driven by 63-year-old Samuel Flores, a contractor of Burrell Boom. Flores, who survived the accident with minor injuries, reported to police that he saw Ramclam approaching on his black and red motorcycle from the opposite direction and, according to a police report released this evening, “moments after seeing the cycle Flores felt an impact, which caused him to lose consciousness.” When Flores regained consciousness, he found himself and his vehicle (the front of which was extensively damaged) in front of a lamppost. Ramclam’s motionless body was found by police near a tree, and his extensively damaged motorcycle was seen lying on the same side of the road.  A police investigation into the accident continues.  “It was a pleasure working with you, Bro. One of the most humble and intelligent individuals I had ever met,” Wesly Downs, Ramclam’s work colleague, posted on his Facebook page. 

 

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Remembering Dr. Theodore Aranda

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

“I will always be grateful to Dr. Aranda for being my ally” – Evan X Hyde

by Khaila Gentle

BELIZE CITY, Mon. July 11, 2022Dr. Theodore Aranda wore many hats throughout his adult life—UDP leader, Garifuna activist, PUP parliamentarian, academic, and most importantly, a prominent figure in the shaping of our nation, and we at AMANDALA are saddened to learn of his passing this week.Dr. Theodore—affectionately known as “Ted”—transitioned on Sunday, after a recent decline in health. Many knew him as a politician and scholar; even more persons knew him as an advocate for the Garifuna people. But to the AMANDALA publisher, Evan X Hyde, Dr. Aranda was an ally, as admirable as he was enigmatic. In an interview with KREM News and AMANDALA, Hyde reminisced on the days when he first got to know of the local politician: “I had never heard of Dr. Aranda until he returned to Belize. And he returned to Belize as a high official of—you said on the radio the Peace Corps. I have always been confused, thinking it was CARE; there was an American organization called CARE. but probably Peace Corps. I don’t know—I was in the midst of a lot of turmoil with UBAD because UBAD began in February of ’69 and it was a time of the Vietnam War…,” Hyde said.Dr. Aranda obtained a Ph.D. in Education from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in 1971. Three years later, he would join the newly formed United Democratic Party and quickly rise up its ranks. He also worked with the Peace Corps in the country and served as its director.In an interview series titled “Lions of the South”, aired in June 2014, Dr. Aranda told Leonides Sanchez about his foray into the world of politics, which occurred while Belize was approaching independence:“Since I didn’t see any serious effort by the Opposition—that was the UDP at that time—and by the leading brains of Belize to sort of fight for the welfare of the country and the survival of the country, I started writing articles about it, then eventually the UDPs came to me and asked me to work with them and run with them, and I was more than happy to,” he said.“I think Dr. Aranda probably joined the UDP pretty soon. He didn’t run in ’74. In ’74 Mr. Paul Guerrero ran for that Dangriga seat for the UDP—he was one of 6 UDP winners,” noted Hyde.While he did not run in the 1974 elections, Dr. Aranda served as the representative for the Dangriga constituency after it was handed over to him by Paul Guerrero. He would later become one of five UDPs to win their seats in 1979 for the constituency, and would soon after go on to serve as UDP leader from 1979-1983, later being succeeded by Rt. Hon. Dr. Manuel Esquivel.“He won it [his constituency] in ’79, which is when three district representatives chose him as the UDP leader, because only two city UDPs had won—Mr. Goldson and Curl Thompson,” said Hyde.While he was known to have lived a private life, Dr. Aranda is recognized for his significant contributions to the development of the nation. Born and raised in Dangriga, he helped to improve his hometown’s drainage system, as well as develop its commercial center, and improve health services in Belize. He was also an advocate for the Garifuna people during a time when the Garinagu and other Afro-Belizeans were subject to extreme racism and discrimination as a result of Belize’s colonial past.“He had so many outstanding credentials—he wasn’t a carouser. The thing, of course, was this ethnic prejudice in Belize, right? And the racism in Belize has—I’m not talking about just the ethnic part having to do with the Garifuna. It’s very entrenched and can be subtle, and very, very painful; you know how the racism works in Belize. But Belize she, ‘well we nuh have no race problem;’ that’s what they’re always saying—‘oh you bring that from America!’. Well, the British had their own way how they created that racism,” remarked Hyde.Dr. Aranda’s days as UDP leader have been described as tumultuous, and the terms of his exit from the party in late 1982 have often been debated, but according to AMANDALA’s publisher, the Dangriga area representative had resigned:“Now he has said to me—Dr. Aranda has said to me—because my impression as publisher/editor of AMANDALA in late 1982 was that they had pushed him out, whereupon they held a leadership convention in early 1983 involving Esquivel, Lindo, and Goldson…But Dr. Aranda has said to me personally that he resigned,” Hyde said.Aranda later joined the PUP and would regain the Dangriga seat from 1989 to 1993. But before that, Dr. Aranda formed his own party, the short-lived Christian Democratic Party. Years later, he would play another pivotal role in Belize’s history—the planning of the Belize Black Summit alongside Hyde himself.“Now, I would like to say this before we end, and before I forget, and like I said, I hope nobody takes it disrespectfully: I think Dr. Aranda started as a UDP, became a PUP, and ended up UBAD,” joked Hyde. “Because without him there would not have been a Black Summit.”Hyde became working allies with Dr. Aranda sometime around the time of the 2003 General Elections. The duo—Hyde’s United Black Association for Development (UBAD) alongside Dr. Aranda’s World Garifuna Organization, which he founded in 2000—began working on the historical Black Summit set to take place in September of that year.“The World Garifuna Organization travelled to Belize City, I can’t say on how many occasions, but I know we in UBAD also traveled to Dangriga. We held months of meetings to put that Black Summit together, and it was a bone in my throat for many years, and so I will always be grateful to Dr. Aranda for being my ally,” said the AMANDALA publisher.

“A remarkable man, a unique man. He maintained his dignity and privacy, and of course, his people always had that affection and respect for him to the nth degree,” he added.AMANDALA sends our condolences to the family of Dr. Theodore “Ted” Aranda as well as to his friends and the Garifuna community.

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