Un Fonds Érosion Côtière adopté à l’assemblée nationale

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Rédaction web
Lundi 17 Octobre 2022 – 14h03

Erosion Salines – M.-C.B.

Un nouveau Fonds Érosion Côtière visant à financer des projets d’adaptation au changement climatique a été adopté.

Dans le cadre du débat sur le Projet de loi de finances pour 2023, les députés français ont voté, vendredi 14 octobre dernier, pour adopter l’amendement de de Madame Sophie Panonacle, députée de la Gironde et Présidente du bureau du Conseil National de la Mer et des Littoraux (CNML), pour la création d’un Fonds Érosion Côtière.

Ce nouveau fond sera abondé par une taxe additionnelle de 0,01% aux Droits de Mutation à Titre Onéreux (DMTO) collectée, dès janvier 2023, sur l’ensemble du territoire national. Il a pour but de financer les projets d’adaptation au changement climatique des communes littorales soumises aux effets de l‘érosion côtière.

Peu d’incidence sur les droits de mutation

La taxe ne concernera donc pas que les communes affectées par l’érosion et son montant sera révisable chaque année. Elle en devrait avoir que très peu d’incidence sur les droits de mutation pour les acquéreurs, les DMTO sont fixés entre 7 et 8 % selon les départements.

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Jamaican women holding their own on Canadian farms Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Among the thousands of Jamaicans who leave the island every year for Canada to participate in the Seasonal Agricultural Workers’ Programme is a large group of women, who are holding their own alongside their male counterparts.

They are employed on properties, such as a 2,500-acre apple farm in the Simcoe, Ontario area, where they are picking and packing the fruit.

Cherries, corn, asparagus, peaches, and other crops are also cultivated on the farm at different times throughout the season.

Nearly 400 people work on the property, and around 120 of them are women.

The farm was one of the stops on Thursday (October 13), for the Jamaican fact-finding team probing the Canadian seasonal agriculture programme.

It was the first time, since starting the interviews on October 10, that the team was encountering a cluster of Jamaican women workers.

Keisha White, who hails from the parish of St Elizabeth, packs peaches and picks apples and is on the programme for the first time.

White, who is a mother of two, said that for her, the major difference between the two countries is the ever-changing weather.

“We’re accustomed to sunshine [in Jamaica] and then we’re accustomed here to all different changes. Today is hot, tomorrow is cold and there’s rain in-between,” she noted.

Her colleague who is from St Catherine but did not wish to be identified is on her second stint with the programme and packs peaches, plums, and nectarines. In Jamaica, she worked at a Chinese restaurant but stopped due to the pandemic.

On working with her Jamaican male counterparts, the mother of a seven-year-old girl said: “When I was learning certain things for the first time, we saw the men do it and then they helped us. They showed us because we didn’t have any experience, and it was our first time on the farm.”

Additionally, she pointed out that the programme has introduced her to other people from the Caribbean, as they work alongside people from Barbados and Trinidad on the large farm.

“They like our culture and always want to know what we say, and we have to translate to let them understand us and we get to understand them too,” she explained.

While she has not mastered any regional dishes so far, she said she has learned quite a bit about other cuisines.

Another woman from St Thomas, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, has been travelling on the programme for four years. In Jamaica, she operates a farm where she reaps plantain, banana, pepper, and pumpkin and sells them in the markets.

While she’s away, her mother and brother tend to her farm. There is a notable difference between her farm activities at home and what she does in Canada.

“At home, I have to go out there in the field [and] take suckers from the roots. When they say farm work here, it doesn’t mean you [always] go out there and dig or plant. I go out there to reap so it’s different from what I do in Jamaica,” the mother of four told JIS News.

She said that working among her Jamaican male counterparts has been a good experience as the men willingly transfer knowledge.

“If it is not this farm and I go on another farm, I can do what is there or what they (the owners) want me to do because the men show us. They teach us … how to bend to pick the apple so it doesn’t affect our back or anything,” she shared.

The St Thomas woman said she maintains her closeness to home by doing things that she would normally do in Jamaica, such as cooking her rice and peas on a Sunday.

Several varieties of apples are farmed on the property, such as red delicious, honeycrisp, fuji, gala, empire, and McIntosh.

There is a certain technique to picking the apples to prevent bruising, entailing a gentle grasp of the fruit in one’s palm before turning it gently and then releasing it into the bin (container).

All the women with whom JIS News spoke easily attested to this technique, with one Clarendon woman explaining just why a woman excels at the job.

“We are gentle…we handle it (the fruit) like our baby,” she chuckled.

The Clarendon woman has been travelling on the programme for 19 years. In Jamaica, she raises chickens, pigs, and goats and plants yams, bananas and plantains. She has three children, two of whom are now in the military.

She said that her years of experience allow her to guide the newer women, who often look to her for advice.

On juggling motherhood with her many years of farm work travels, she said that she has always received the support of family members and while away, she remains in constant contact with her children.

“I call them in the mornings. When they have a break, they will call me or text,” she said.

The Seasonal Agricultural Workers’ Programme has been ongoing since 1966.

The team of factfinders, commissioned by the Ministry of Labour and Social Security to look into the programme, are collecting information to prepare a report on the workers’ status.

By Mickella Anderson, JIS News

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Kanye West to buy conservative social media platform Parler Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The rapper formerly known as Kanye West is offering to buy right-wing friendly social network Parler shortly after getting locked out of Twitter and Instagram for antisemitic posts.

The acquisition of Parler would give West, legally known as Ye, control of a social media platform and a new outlet for his opinions with no gatekeeper.

But even among the new breed of largely right-wing social apps that purport to support free speech by having looser rules and moderation, Parler’s user base is tiny.

Parlement Technologies, which owns the platform, and West said the acquisition should be completed in the fourth quarter, but details like price were not disclosed. Parlement Technologies said the agreement includes the use of private cloud services via Parlement’s private cloud and data center infrastructure.

Ye was blocked from posting on Twitter and Instagram a week ago over antisemitic posts that the social networks said violated their policies. In one post on Twitter, Ye said he would soon go “death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE,” according to internet archive records, making an apparent reference to the US defense readiness condition scale known as DEFCON.

Ye is no stranger to controversy, once suggesting slavery was a choice and calling the COVID-19 vaccine “the mark of the beast.” Earlier this month, he was criticized for wearing a “White Lives Matter” T-shirt to his collection at Paris Fashion Week.

“In a world where conservative opinions are considered to be controversial we have to make sure we have the right to freely express ourselves,” Ye said in a prepared statement.

The acquisition could also breathe new life into Parler, which has struggled amid competition from other conservative-friendly platforms like Truth Social, started by former President Donald Trump. Parler had a relatively tiny average of 983,000 monthly active users for the first half of this year, according to Data.ai, which tracks mobile app usage.

Truth Social had 2.4 million monthly users during the same period, despite launching just in February and only on Apple devices, according to Data.ai. The market research firm said another right-leaning platform, Gettr, which launched in July 2021, is ahead of both Parler and Truth Social with about 3.8 million monthly active users.

None of them come close to Twitter, which reported that it had a daily average of about 237.8 million active users during its most recent quarter. Many of the right-wing platforms emerged from opposition to the content-moderation restrictions at mainstream services such as Twitter and Facebook, though billionaire Elon Musk has pledged to lessen some of Twitter’s speech restrictions if he follows through with a promised $44 billion takeover of the San Francisco company later this month.

Parler, which launched in August 2018, didn’t start picking up steam until 2020. But it was kicked offline following the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol. A month after the attack, Parler announced a relaunch. It returned to Google Play last month.

“This deal will change the world, and change the way the world thinks about free speech,” Parlement Technologies CEO George Farmer said in a prepared statement.

By Michelle Chapman

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Two men held as cops seize illegal gun during Portmore raid Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The accused was a friend of the child’s family

Loop News

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Lawmen assigned to the St. Catherine South Police Division arrested two men with illegal possession of firearm and ammunition following the seizure of a Ruger pistol and nine rounds of ammunition in Bridgeport, St Catherine on Monday, October 17.

Reports from the Portmore police are that at about 4:05 am, lawmen were on operation at premises in the community when the firearm and ammunition were found. Both men who occupied the premises were taken into custody however; their identities are being withheldpending further investigations.

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61-year-old ‘family friend’ charged with raping child Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
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A man from Orange Hill district in Darliston, Westmoreland, is scheduled to appear before the court amid multiple allegations of rape of a 13-year-old girl in his community.

Charged is 61-year-old Wellesly Stone, the police said in a release on Monday.

Reports from the Savanna-la-Mar police are that on October 6 and October 8, 2022, the accused, who is said to be a family friend, was at home with the child when he allegedly sexually assaulted her.

A report was made to the police and an investigation launched.

Stone was apprehended a week later on October 15, the police said, after he was pointed out to the police.

He was subsequently charged, however, his court date has not yet been finalised, the police said Monday.

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THA to spend $17.5m for inaugural carnival

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

THA Secretary of Tourism and Culture Tashia Burris. File photo/David Reid

THA Secretary of Tourism Tashia Burris said the Executive Council has approved $17.5 million for the island’s inaugural carnival.

Burris announced the budget on Monday, less than two weeks before the official carnival activities get under way, from October 28-30.

“We’re actually hoping to spend less, because we have a number of sponsors who have come on board to support the carnival in its first year…Our spend is really targeted to marketing and ensuring this is the safest carnival,” she said.

She said 200 additional police officers will be on the ground to ensure everyone’s safety.

She warned that any person who has plans of engaging in illegal activities to think twice.

“We put the safety and security of our locals and visitors at the forefront, and obviously building out the infrastructure that is necessary so people can have an epic time.”

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Gonzales proposes expanded wastewater coverage

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Public Utilities Minister Marvin Gonzales, third from right, and IDB country representative Carina Cockburn, fourth from left, are joined by San Fernando West MP Faris Al-Rawi, San Fernando Mayor Junia Regrello, San Fernando East MP Brian Manning and other officials at the commissioning of the San Fernando wastewater treatment plant on Friday. Photo by Marvin Hamilton

SOME 17 years after the project was first conceptualised, San Fernando has finally received the promised WASA wastewater treatment plant. The plant has a capacity to treat 45 million litres per day and serve a population of approximately 116,000 people in surrounding communities of San Fernando East and West, Pointe-a-Pierre and Oropouche East.

“The San Fernando wastewater treatment plant is the culmination of years of planning and construction, and a capital investment of just over $120 million,” Public Utilities Minister Marvin Gonzales said, as he formally commissioned the facility at Gulf View, La Romaine on Friday.

The project was funded by the InterAmerican Development Bank (IDB), with main contractor Acciona Agua SA in association with Atlatec, SA De CV and AAA Wastewater Treatment Plant Ltd (AAA). Consulting firm AECOM Canada Ltd supervised and designed the facility and its collection system.

Gonzales said along with the projects at Malabar and Trincity, the San Fernando plant now places TT as having the largest wastewater coverage in the entire Caribbean, which stands at 42 per cent.

“We have heard about the importance of wastewater in so far as it relates to human health and reduction of water-borne diseases affecting so many of our children and populations around the world.”

In the circumstance, he said, “I propose to go further to continue the drive to expand wastewater coverage in TT.”

With the coming onstream of this facility, he said, “the raw sewage overflows which occurred ever so often due to non-functioning privately-owned pumping stations in this catchment area, will now be a thing of the past resulting in a reduction in the risks to public health and the environment

Stating that the treatment plants present a number of opportunities for TT to explore, Gonzales said instead of throwing wastewater out into the environment, he intends to engage the IDB in a discussion where highly treated wastewater could be used by the agricultural, commercial and industrial sectors.

In this way, he said, potable water now used for these purposes can be channelled to homes to provide a 24/7 service.

“When you look at a modern facility like this one in San Fernando, you would not be able to distinguish wastewater and water from the bottle that we are drinking from.”

In keeping with the proposals to transform the water and sewage system, Gonzales said approval was given, two weeks ago, for another loan facility of US$315 million from the IDB.

There are three components to this facility – water stabilisation and improvement, support for water-sector transformation, and network optimisation.

“That first operation will be made available to us by the end of the year and it will be put to use to support major infrastructure works around the country and will increase water supply.”

Gonzales said they have been hard at work over the last few years, putting together plans not only for the transformation of WASA, but designing some specific key project all across TT which will not only turn around WASA from an institutional management perspective.

He said it would initiate a number of projects to increase water production, automate all WASA infrastructure and improve water supply to the people of TT.

He said WASA is undertaking a series of repair and rehabilitation works at several water treatment plants, to bring them up to capacity, as too often they were not aware of the amount of water being produced in some of plants or when wells go down.

Tired of hearing complaints on social media about water disruptions, he said there is a proposal to automate WASA’s water production, transmission and distribution.

“So we can understand, in real time, and know when disruptions occur so that we can reduce the negative impact on our customers.”

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Human leg found in Cunupia stream

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

A policeman walks through some bushes in Cunupia to get to a stream where a severed human leg was found on Monday afternoon. –

A man who went to a stream in Cunupia to pick flowers for prayers, stumbled across a severed human leg on Monday afternoon.

Newsday was told the man went to Gillies Road, off Mon Plaisir Road, saw a foot sticking out from a piece of sponge at around 12 pm and called the authorities.

Police from the Cunupia station went to the northern side of the road and saw it was a left leg. They said the rest of the body is still unaccounted for.

Up to 2.35 pm, police were waiting for the arrival of crime scene investigators and homicide detectives.

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COLUMN: De vismarkt

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

ROZENGEUR / Gerold Rozenblad Vandaag moet het gebeuren. Of de markt, waarin de assembleevergadering vrijdag ontaardde en abrupt door voorzitter

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Microcredit Act feeding underground economy, says O’Meally Nelson Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The micro-lending industry will likely see a culture of non-compliance evolving as many firms struggle to meet the requirements for operation under the rigour of the Microcredit Act, Jamaica Association of Micro Financing (Jamfin) chairman Blossom O’Meally-Nelson, says.

O’Meally-Nelson in making her contribution at the recent Anti-Money Laundering/Counter Financing of Terrorism Conference hosted by the Jamaica Institute of Financial Services (JIFS) and the Jamaica Bankers Association (JBA), told the gathering that the “pressure” now placed on micro-lenders is also having the unintended consequence of fostering an underground economy.

The Anti-Money Laundering/Counter Financing of Terrorism Conference was held in a hybrid format from October 11 to 12.

Microcredit institutions (MCIs) have long complained about the fit and proper rules and the paperwork as well as operational changes required for their business to get approved for a microcredit licence under the new legal arrangements created by the passing of the Microcredit Act in Parliament last year.

“The Micro-Credit Act has been done and has created a whole heap of pressure for micro-finance institutions because the Anti-money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) framework is not fully in place,” she said.

She continued: “I think we are going to create the greatest non-compliance in history. We are feeding the undergrown economy.”

She said the standards for operations have been set so high under the Microcredit Act that many operators will not be able to attain the level needed to be licensed.

“There is a strong feeling that this is done to cull the sector and reduce the sector to a few people…it is very hard, for them to attain the standards,” she said.

Many MCIs also operate informally and the strictures of the Microcredit Act have discouraged them from seeking to be licensed, O’Meally- Nelson said.

“We see a goodly portion of customers disappearing with all those other microfinance institutions that are not applying for registration,” she said.

The absence of a national identification system that would foster proper due diligence checks of customers also poses challenges for the industry.

“These customers operate mainly in the cash economy. These people don’t have any bank accounts. The majority of loans that you make are personal [and] this makes the sector vulnerable,” she said.

“Even if a person has a business… they don’t have any structure… [so] you have to lend the individual, you cannot lend to the business,” she said.

She reasoned that the pushback from citizens who think the National Identification System (NIDS) is aimed at capturing them in the tax bracket may be reduced if Jamaicans are incentivized to register for the NIDS

“If you get a National ID, you get free hospital care,” she suggested.

Conversely, “why would you get a National ID if you have to pay taxes, your children can’t go to school and you don’t have anything [financially]? What’s the point?” she reasoned.

The Jamfin chairman also suggested that the public be educated about Know Your Customer (KYC) standards to aid in their understanding of financial processes.

“The public doesn’t know what we mean by KYC, neither do they care because they need to eat today,” she said suggesting the ability of the customer to secure a consumer loan supersedes their concern for the process.

“So, our financial literacy programme has to be within the context that something is going to [benefit] them,” she said.

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