Sections of Manzanilla/Mayaro Road collapse after flood

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Screenshot taken from a video posted by the TT Met Office showing the collapsed part of the Manzanilla/Mayaro Road on Wednesday morning. –

THE Manzanilla/Mayaro Road has partially collapsed, and drivers are being advised to avoid trying to use the road, which links Sangre Grande to Mayaro.

Constant flooding over the last few days and excessive runoff from the Nariva Swamp on Wednesday have washed away segments of the road.

Videos taken by people driving though the area showed almost an entire lane gone in one area, with a steady flow of water gushing across it.

Chairman of the Mayaro /Rio Claro Regional Corporation Raymond Cozier, in a telephone interview on Wednesday morning, advised drivers to stay away from the area stretching from the Mitan River to the Manzanilla Beach Resort.

He suggests they use alternative routes through Cunapo, Biche and Rio Claro to get to Mayaro.

“Information has been received that the Manzanilla Road has partially collapsed and is impassable to cars and vans, with water about three feet in some areas.

“I was with the team from the Met Office who was doing the survey. They indicated several parts (of the road) have collapsed on the edges. It may get worse, since the velocity of water is extremely strong.

“No vehicles should be traversing at this time.”

He shared with the Newsday a video sent to him, which was taken by a driver earlier on Wednesday morning, showing a part which caved in.

Mayaro MP Rushton Paray also advised no vehicles should try to use this road.

In a Facebook post. Paray said several parts of the outer edges have collapsed because of the velocity of the runoff.

Cozier said the area really falls under the jurisdiction of the Sangre Grande Regional Corporation.

“SGRC has advised that a team from the Ministry of Works and Transport is on the way to assess the situation.”

In a bulletin on Wednesday, the Met Service said the country remains under an adverse yellow-level weather alert and yellow riverine alert, as most major rivers are swollen.

This story will be updated.

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3 covid deaths recorded in last week

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

In this April 2020 file photo a ventilator was already been set up at the Scarborough General Hospital for covid19 patients. – Photo by David Reid

THE Ministry of Health reported on Tuesday 143 new covid19 infections and three deaths between November 16-22.

In the previous seven-day period, there were 145 new cases and six deaths.

The seven-day average of new cases this week is 20 and the seven-day average of covid-related deaths is one.

Last week, the averages were 21 new cases and one death per day.

Active cases now stand at 204 – 17 more than a week ago. There are 18 patients in hospital, down from 22.

The total number of covid deaths stands at 4,266.

Since the national vaccination programme began over a year ago, 717,958 people have been fully vaccinated, that is, an additional 61 over the past week.

So far, 169,203 people have had a booster shot – 31 more than last week. The percentage of the population that is fully vaccinated remained at 51.3 per cent for a fifth week.

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$10M worth of ganja found at Corentyne sea dam

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

Ranks of the Customs Anti-Narcotics Unit (CANU) unearthed a quantity of marijuana at Corentyne in Region Six (East Berbice-Corentyne) on Tuesday.

According to CANU, their ranks conducted an operation on the sea dam in No 78 Village Corentyne, Berbice, and a thorough search of the area revealed several parcels of suspected cannabis hidden behind a wooden structure located on the sea dam.

Officers then made checks around the area in an attempt to identify and apprehend the individuals involved but were unsuccessful.

The drugs were escorted to CANU’s Skeldon office, Corentyne, Berbice, where it tested positive as cannabis.

According to CANU, the illegal substance weighed 79.6kg, with a street value of approximately $10 million.

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Letter: Diaspora browbeating must come to an end

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

Dear Editor,

I write with reference to a letter to President Ali, published on 13/11/22 under the title “We are calling for a gov’t energy policy that guarantees a fair deal for Guyana and the planet”. The letter was signed by 45 persons (G45), many of whom claim Guyanese citizenship but do not live here.

While the concerns and recommendations to the President are of great interest, the letter contains two fundamental flaws that cancel out its initial worth. First and foremost is the recommendation that Guyana assume the role of carbon sink ‘in chief’ to facilitate “fossil economies [that] desperately need this service.” Simply put, the G45 wants the same fossil economies that have contributed the most to climate change to be given a chance to contribute even more, while asking a developing country to absorb their mess. In effect, what the G45 is suggesting is that Guyanese who live here, as against the ones who live in fossil economies recommended for protection, accept a neocolonial model by relegating itself to a natural resource supplier with no value-added benefits.

Editor, I note with grave concern that many in the G45 group are enjoying all the benefits of the fossil fuel economies they live in, while recommending we supply the environmental wherewithal for their comfort. Rather than focus only on the supply side of things, therefore, I urge the G45 to focus on the populations that contribute the most to GHG.

About half of the signatories to the President live in high-consumption fossil economies. They are the ones who must adjust their lifestyles to meet the various goals set out in the global climate change agenda.

A cursory look at the relevant data on the consumption side points to the real source of GHG emissions. Let us begin with electricity consumption, expressed in kilowatt hours. Here is a quick take – Norway, 29,000; Canada 16,800; USA 13,000; Australia 10,300; UK 4,600; India 1200; Guyana 1,000; Nigeria 135.

There is a vast divide between the developed and developing world. Millions of people in the latter still live in the dark, while a typical house in North America has 100 light bulbs and multiple appliances.

Vehicle ownership is a good indicator of who is doing the polluting. 43 countries have more than 500 cars per 1000 persons, of which 37 are from North America and Europe. 64 countries have less than 100 vehicles per 1000, all of which are in the Third World. Gasoline per capita consumption is highest in the developed world, with US and Canada burning 4.39 and 3.62 litres respectively every day. Readers may want to know that Canada, with 38 million people, has more vehicles than all of Africa, with a population of 1.2 billion.

Natural gas consumption shows the same staggering disparities between what the wealthy nations burn up versus consumption in the Third World. The US burns 35 times more natural gas than Mozambique, and Canada burns 149 times more than Tanzania (https://www.worldometers.info/gas/gas-consumption-by-country/).

Fossil fuel subsidies are a major indirect contributor to GHG. Public money (subsidies) going to fossil fuels could instead go to social spending, health and development, clean energy, energy access for the poor, or other areas important to the public. (priceofoil.org). Canada (where some of the letter writers live) is high on fossil subsidies, amounting to nearly Cdn$5B annually (iisd.org). In Canada, fossil fuel subsidies are given at both the federal and provincial levels.

According to the International Institute for Sustainable Development, “examples of provincial subsidies include crown royalty reductions in Alberta valued at an average of Cdn$1.16 billion and deep drilling and infrastructure credits in British Columbia valued at Cdn$350 million in 2019 (iisd.org).

In October of this year, President Biden released 15 million barrels of oil in order to lower gasoline prices and deal with inflation. Lowering gas price is a guaranteed means of increasing emissions, but when citizens in wealthy countries with huge reserves need a break, they get it.

Given all the above, I call of the signatories to the letter to President Ali to go to the Governments where they reside and ask them to stop drilling, stop subsidising, and stop pressuring Third World countries to assume the role of raw materials’ providers in the age of ideas-based value. Further, the activists should go tell their fellow consumers in the developed world to ease up on their debilitating consumption practices. Diaspora browbeating must come to an end.

Sincerely,Dr Randolph Persaud

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BARBADOS-FINANCE-PM seeks to re-assure business community

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

Post Content

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GUYANA-ENERGY-Guyana moving ahead with plans for international energy conference

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

Post Content

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Beenie Man injures ankle in bike crash — source Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

1 hrs ago

Entertainer Beenie Man

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King of the dancehall Beenie Man reportedly escaped serious injury when a bike he was driving collided with a taxi at an undisclosed location in the Corporate Area on Tuesday.

Beenie Man reportedly suffered injuries to his leg and was hospitalised but has since been released.

“Beenie Man stopped to talk to somebody and a taxi came around the corner and collided with him injuring his ankle,” a usually reliable source told Loop News.

The artiste’s girlfriend, Camille Lee, took to Instagram Live on Tuesday to reassure fans that the deejay was okay.

The Live also showed the ‘Romie’ deejay alongside others watching World Cup football.

The ‘Doctor’ also paused to reassure fans that he was well, but fans commented that his lower leg was bandaged in the video clip.

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PM leads tribute to businessman Dr Marshall Hall Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Prime Minister Andrew Holness has led tributes to prominent businessmen and economist Dr Marshall McGowan Hall, hailing him for his “incalculable contribution to national development”.

Hall, widely recognised for his association with the Jamaica Producers Group Limited, where he served as director for over 40 years and as group managing director for 27 years, died on Tuesday morning. He was 88.

Hall is the father of the current Jamaica Producers Group CEO, Jeffrey.

Mr Marshall Hall passed away on Tuesday, November 23, 2022. He was 88 years old.

Holness said with Hall’s death, Jamaica had lost “one of its foremost academic thinkers and business leader”, adding that the country “will continue to benefit from his legacy for generations to come.”

The prime minister said while Hall served at Jamaica Producers, he “pioneered the large-scale modernisation of banana production in Jamaica which sustained the local industry and boosted national employment and export.”

Outside of Hall’s distinguished career at Jamaica Producers, Holness underscored his academic career as an economist who served as dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of the West Indies, as well as head of the department of management studies.

“Among other significant leadership roles at UWI, Dr Hall was a widely published writer in the areas of micro and institutional economics,” Holness said, adding that Hall also served as chairman of several other entities and public bodies, including Jamaica Public Service (JPS) and National Commercial Bank and Mutual Life.

“I express my deepest sympathy to his family, friends, loved ones and colleagues in both the business and academic fields,” stated the prime minister.

The Opposition People’s National Party (PNP) said it remembered Hall “as an inspirational leader who made outstanding contributions to Jamaica”.

The PNP added: “We are deeply saddened by his passing, as he was one of Jamaica’s finest economists and business development leaders.

“Dr Hall was a true patriot who believed in the upliftment of people through education and economic development,” the party shared in a statement on Tuesday.

For his part, Opposition leader and PNP president Mark Golding offered his sympathies to the family and friends of the businessman and economist.

“He was a gentleman and a brilliant scholar who loved his country and dedicated his life to contributing to the development and strengthening of private and public sectors in post-independence Jamaica,” said Golding.

In its tribute, the Keith Duncan-led Private Sector Organisation of Jamaica (PSOJ) recognised Hall as “an astute businessman, who served his country with distinction in both academia and business”.

The PSOJ highlighted his passion for the growth and innovation of Jamaica’s banana industry which has been exemplified throughout his years as group managing director of Jamaica Banana Producers Association Limited (now Jamaica Producers Group).

“He (Hall) is accredited with spearheading the resuscitation of the banana industry in St Mary and Jamaica after hurricane Allen in 1980 and again (after) hurricane Gilbert in 1988,” the PSOJ said.

The powerful private sector lobby said Hall’s “unwavering commitment to the development of Jamaica’s private and public sectors is an exceptional legacy that has been etched in Jamaica’s history.”

The body noted its own honouring of Hall for his “invaluable role as an outstanding business leader by recognising him as the 2004 PSOJ Hall Of Fame inductee.”

Meanwhile, the PSOJ also recognised Hall for distinguishing himself as a “remarkable intellectual”, pointing to his extended years in academia locally.

His vast academic expertise, according to the PSOJ, has also extended beyond the shores of Jamaica, having served as Professor at the University of Wisconsin, Washington University and Makerere University in Uganda.

Equally saddened by Hall’s passing is the Jamaica Chamber of Commerce (JCC), which said Jamaica had lost “one of its most fervent and formidable sons”.

“Marshall Hall’s lifetime achievements indicate that he believed in the principle of giving back and on institution-building.

“He served selflessly as a mentor and was an inspiration to many, spanning several generations and delivered such tangible contributions to Jamaica and the region that his impact will be felt far into the future,” stated the JCC.

In recognition of his lifetime of business leadership and public service, Hall was awarded the Order of Jamaica and the Order of Distinction in the Rank of Commander and was inducted into the Private Sector Hall of Fame.

Hall was born in Rollington Town, Kingston in 1934 and was educated at Kingston College.

He was a committed family man, married to Dr Jeanette Hall for over 60 years. He has three children (Dr Allyson Hall, Andrea Perkins, and Jeffrey Hall), four grandchildren, a close extended family, colleagues, and friends.

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Japan get 2 late goals to beat Germany 2-1 at World Cup Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

43 minutes ago

Japan players celebrate after Takuma Asano scored his side’s second goal during the World Cup Group E match against Germany, at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha, Qatar, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2022. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko).

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

DOHA, Qatar (AP) — Substitutes Ritsu Doan and Takuma Asano scored late goals Wednesday to give Japan a come-from-behind 2-1 victory over Germany at the World Cup.

Ilkay G?ndogan had given four-time champion Germany the lead with a first-half penalty. But Doan, who plays for German team Freiburg, pounced on a rebound to equalize in the 76th minute after Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer blocked a shot from Takumi Minamino.

Then Asano, who plays for German team Bochum, sprinted clear of Nico Schlotterbeck and beat Neuer from a narrow angle in the 83rd.

It was the first competitive meeting between the two nations.

Before the game, Germany’s players covered their mouths during the team photo in an apparent rebuke to FIFA following its decision to stop plans to wear armbands to protest discrimination in host nation Qatar.

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How to take a career break in 2022 Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Back in 2016, Jamie Clark of Seattle was a software engineer who planned to take a year off of work to finish a master’s degree in computational linguistics.

One year turned into three and my career changed to financial planning.

Nowadays, Clark, who uses they/them pronouns, believes the experience makes them a better advisor – particularly since their career break didn’t turn out as originally planned.

“Part of our job as financial planners is to help people be prepared,” says Clark, now a certified financial planner who recently launched their own firm, Ruby Pebble Financial Planning.

“And I want to help people build that flexibility.”

Career breaks are extended and usually unpaid stretches of time off work. Such breaks can be aspirational — giving you time to travel, pursue a degree, change careers or launch a business.

Or, they can be prompted by life events, such as caring for a child, nursing a family member, or dealing with an illness or burnout.

Whatever the cause, some planning can help you make the most of your break.

Save and budget diligently

CFP Henry Hoang of Irvine, California, doesn’t believe most people need detailed budgets, as long as they’re saving adequately for their goals. But career breaks are an exception, he says.

When your paychecks stop, you’ll want to have enough savings to sustain you. That starts with knowing precisely what you’re spending today and estimating what your expenses will be during your break.

Some costs might decline, such as commuting or child care. But you also might have new costs, including higher health insurance premiums if your current coverage is employer-subsidized.

Once you calculate how much you need to save, consider adding a fudge factor equal to two or three months’ worth of expenses in case it takes longer than expected to land your next job, Hoang suggests.

One of Hoang’s friends didn’t do that and wound up raiding his 401(k) to pay the bills.

And speaking of retirement: Extended breaks could mean you’ll need to work past the normal retirement age or increase your savings rate significantly to retire on time.

If you’re planning to take more than two years off, use a retirement calculator or consult a financial planner to see how that might affect your plans to retire, Hoang says.

Clark saved enough from a high-paying job to cover living expenses for two years and was able to stretch that to three years after getting married.

Their spouse paid the bills and Clark used the remaining savings to pay tuition and other costs to get their financial planning credential.

Clark says that careful tracking of expenses and thoughtful budgeting not only helped make their savings last, but it also alleviated some of the stress of Clark being without a paycheck.

“There are always surprises, but it’s good to try and minimize them, or at least minimize impact on your finances,” Clark says.

Make a plan for your time

You may feel you need a break from strict schedules, but having no plan means you could waste this precious time you prepared and saved for.

Hoang has another cautionary tale from a client who started his break with a strong desire to change careers and spend more time with his young children.

His days quickly filled up with parenting duties, and he never made time to explore other jobs, Hoang says. When his savings ran out, he ended up going back into his same field.

“Having clarity on what you really want out of this career break could make a tremendous difference in experience overall,” Hoang says.

The details of your plan will depend on your career break goals, but consider scheduling lunch with a professional colleague every month or so to maintain your network and stay abreast of developments in your field.

If you’re considering a career change, make a timeline for when you’ll accomplish certain steps, such as meeting with a career counsellor and determining what education or certifications you’ll need.

Consider Alternatives

An extended career break may not be possible. You may have too much debt, too many bills or too many people depending on you to go months or years without a paycheck.

Even if you have the savings, you may be understandably wary about leaving the job you have without another one lined up.

But that doesn’t necessarily mean you’re stuck.

A few employers offer paid sabbaticals, while others provide unpaid leave to workers who need a break.

You may be eligible for up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act if you have a newborn, adopt or foster a child, suffer from a serious health condition or are caring for an immediate family member such as a child, spouse or parent with a serious health condition.

Given the tight labour market, your employer may be willing to adjust your workload, transfer you to a job with less responsibility or reduce your hours.

That could free up the time and energy you need to focus on what’s important to you — and what you want next in your life.

By Liz Weston of NerdWallet

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