Three People Hospitalised After Marisule Road Accident – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Emergency responders from the Babonneau and Gros Islet fire stations rushed three people to the OKEU Hospital Sunday night after three vehicles collided at Marisule near Sunset Motors after 8:00 pm.

According to the Saint Lucia Fire Service (SLFS), the emergency crew had to extricate a female driver trapped in one of the vehicles.

A Gros Islet fire station ambulance transported her to the hospital.

Emergency personnel from the Babonneau fire station transported two other patients, a man and a woman, to the medical facility.

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There are no further details at present.

Headline photo from social media.

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Gobernador anuncia incentivo para empleados de centros de cuido y hogares licenciados por ACUDEN

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El gobernador Pedro Rafael Pierluisi Urrutia anunció el lunes que empleados de centros de cuido y hogares licenciados por ACUDEN recibirán bonos de hasta 4 mil dólares, además de incentivos de hasta 400 dólares para el plan médico y 200 dólares para gastos de transportación.

“Hemos distribuido múltiples ayudas para nuestros servidores públicos, quienes a lo largo de la pandemia se han mantenido trabajando y llevando servicios de excelencia para la niñez de Puerto Rico. Queremos retener y aumentar la fuerza laboral de los centros de cuidos y hogares licenciados por ACUDEN, por lo que continuaremos identificando recursos disponibles y procurando agilidad en los desembolsos de fondos federales para asegurar que el dinero llegue directo a quienes brindan estos servicios tan esenciales para nuestros niños y niñas. Mi gobierno está comprometido con brindar un alivio económico a estos trabajadores e incentivar su compromiso con Puerto Rico”, sostuvo el gobernador en declaraciones escritas.

Explicó junto a la secretaria del Departamento de la Familia (DF), Carmen Ana González Magaz y el administrador de la Administración para el Cuidado y Desarrollo Integral de la Niñez (ACUDEN), Roberto Carlos Pagán, que esto se da como parte del Programa Asistencia Laboral (PAL) cuyo impacto económico es de 20 millones de dólares provenientes del Child Care Stabilization Fund del Plan de Rescate Americano (ARPA) y se beneficiarán más de 2,000 empleados.

El primer ejecutivo explicó que este Programa busca proveer asistencia a los proveedores de cuidado infantil, mitigar los efectos de la pandemia del COVID-19 y estabilizar las operaciones de estos centros.

Por su parte la titular del DF, sostuvo que “seguimos creando estrategias que promuevan la productividad y estamos brindando mayores recursos a nuestros profesionales aliados; maestros, maestras y componentes de los centros de cuidado infantil, quienes establecen la base de la educación para que nuestros niños y niñas logren un impacto positivo en su crecimiento y desarrollo integral”.

Bajo las tres categorías de PAL se encuentra: el bono de retención, los incentivos de plan médico y los gastos de transportación. El bono de retención será de 1,000 dólares trimestral para un total de 4,000 dólares para empleados a tiempo completo, mientras que para empleados a tiempo parcial será de 500 dólares trimestral para un total de 2,000 dólares. En cuanto a los incentivos de plan médico, se les otorgará un beneficio de hasta 400 dólares que incluye cubierta familiar para sus dependientes. De igual manera, los empleados recibirán hasta un máximo de 200 dólares mensuales para gastos de transportación por concepto de gasolina, servicio de taxi, transporte público, estacionamiento o peaje.

“Estamos procurando la recuperación del sistema de cuidos infantiles y asegurando la continuidad de los servicios. Reconocemos la necesidad de incentivar la retención de los miles de trabajadores de nuestros centros y le seguiremos haciendo justicia salarial”, expresó el administrador, quien enfatizó que el desembolso de los fondos será a través de los proveedores de servicios y tienen hasta el 31 de agosto del 2022 para someter la solicitud.

Los proveedores de servicios podrán descargar la solicitud a través de

acudenpecc.familia.pr.gov. Una vez hayan completado la solicitud deberán enviarla por correo electrónico con los documentos requeridos a la siguiente dirección pal@familia.pr.gov.

Toda persona o proveedor que necesite más información o asistencia pueden comunicarse al 787-589-4132 y para audio impedidos al 787-585-1193. El centro de llamadas está disponible de lunes a viernes en horario de 8:00 de la mañana a 5:00 de la tarde. También estará disponible la plataforma “ACUDEN Te Asiste” para cualquier consulta o pregunta que surja durante el proceso de solicitud.

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BAHAMAS-ECONOMY-Bahamas projects economic growth of five per cent this year

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

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Soleil d’?t? de retour !

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Le Nouvelliste

Eh oui! Ce n’est ni une rumeur ni un canular, le concours Soleil d’?t? est bel et bien de retour cette ann?e. La nouvelle a ?t? confirm?e par l’un des instigateurs du projet et P.DG de la radio t?l? Soleil, le R?v. P?re Claudy Duclervil, qui exprime la joie d?bordante de son ?quipe tout en revenant sur les faits ayant occasionn? cette d?cision.

<>, explique le pr?tre, sourire aux l?vres, les yeux grands ouverts et d’un ton optimiste comme pour justifier la reprise dudit show.

Pour en arriver l?, le travail n’a surtout pas ?t? facile pour l’?quipe d’organisation qui n’avait que quelques semaines devant elle, a en croire le num?ro un de la radio- t?l? Soleil, Claudy Duclervil. Selon ce dernier, cela a n?cessit? un redoublement d’efforts des techniciens, qui, souligne-t-il, ont d? bosser jour et nuit pendant une dizaine de jours afin de finaliser les travaux d’am?nagement de l’espace et du podium devant accueillir l’?v?nement.

Plusieurs innovations ont ?t? constat?es avec le retour de cet <> qu’est Soleil d’?t?. D’abord, un d?cor flambant neuf avec de multiples couleurs, des jeux de lumi?res entre autres ; une nouvelle chanson accompagn?e d’une nouvelle danse ; mais ?galement deux nouvelles t?tes auront la charge d’animer la 11e ?dition de cet ?v?nement. Il s’agit de Re?chana Baptiste et Na?ka S??de.

Pour ce qui est du concours de chant, sur 100 inscrit, plus d’une trentaine d’enfants dont l’?ge est compris entre 6 et 12 ans devront exhiber, pendant pratiquement un mois, leur talent sur le podium de Soleil d’?t?. Le concours se d?roulera en plusieurs phases: d’abord, deux premiers tours devront permettre au jury de s?lectionner les dix meilleures notes pour les demi-finales. Ensuite, cinq d’entre ces talents seront admis pour la phase ultime o? trois d’entre eux seront prim?s.

Qui sera, cette ann?e, la prochaine Loutchina D?cius, D?borah Henristal ou encore Clifford Dum? ? Pour r?pondre ? cette question, le public devra donc esp?rer la finale pr?vue le 27 ao?t prochain. Pour l’instant, les organisateurs vous convient ? capter d?s le dimanche 7 ao?t, ? partir de 7h p.m, le show de lancement de Soleil d’?t? 2022. Ce dernier sera diffus? simultan?ment sur la cha?ne 25, T?l? Soleil et sur la cha?ne YouTube de radio t?l? Soleil.

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127 new COVID cases amid 18.1% positivity rate Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Jamaica recorded 127 new COVID-19 cases over a 24-hour period up to Sunday afternoon.

There was no coronavirus-related death recorded for the one-day reporting period.

The overall coronavirus death toll in Jamaica remains at 3,207.

However, the separate deaths of four COVID-19 patients are under investigation by health officials.

There were 85 recoveries on the day, bringing that tally to 94,528.

The newly confirmed COVID-19 cases brought the total number on record for the island to 147,316.

Notably, the island recorded a 18.1 per cent positivity rate based on the samples that were tested on Sunday.

Of the newly confirmed cases, 75 are females and 52 are males, with ages ranging from nine days to 105 years.

The case count was made up of Kingston and St Andrew (37), St Catherine (34), St James (12), St Elizabeth (11), Clarendon (10), St Ann (seven), Westmoreland (five), Trelawny (four), Hanover (four), St Mary and (three).

There are 27 moderately ill patients, eight severely ill patients and seven critically patients among 1,307 active cases now under observation in Jamaica.

A total of 122 COVID-19 patients are now hospitalised locally.

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Search launched for missing teen from Mavis Bank, St Andrew Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Child identified as Tianna Lindo, otherwise called ‘TT’ or ‘Shantai

Kimmo Matthews

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Tianna Lindo, otherwise called ‘TT’ or ‘Shantai

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An Ananda Alert has been activated for 16-year-old Tianna Lindo, otherwise called ‘TT’ or ‘Shantai,’ of Robertsfield in Mavis Bank, St Andrew who has been missing since Tuesday, August 02.

She is of dark complexion, medium build, and about 175 centimetres (5 feet 9 inches) tall.

Reports from the Mavis Bank Police are that at about 10:00 am, Tianna was last seen at home wearing a multi-coloured T-shirt and blue jeans pants.

All efforts to contact her have proven futile. Anyone knowing the whereabouts of Tianna Lindo is being asked to contact the Mavis Bank Police at 876-977-8004, Police 119 emergency number or the nearest police station.

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Tropical wave moves off African west coast after weeks of quiet

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The National Hurricane Center said on Sunday that a tropical wave has moved off the African west coast as the peak of hurricane season approaches.

As of the NHC’s 8 p.m. tropical outlook, forecasters give the system a 40% chance of formation in the next five days.

On Saturday, the NHC began projecting the formation of a potential tropical system in the eastern Atlantic Ocean and forecast the wave to move off the west coast of Africa over the weekend.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration released its midseason forecast update last week. It is still expecting an above-average number of storms, which it had predicted ahead of the season’s start, with a range of 14 to 21 named storms.

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Stores of Digicel and Flow damaged

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The police are investigating cases of vandalism at the St. John’s offices of Digicel and Flow.

The two telecommunication service providers have not commented directly on the incident.

The damage is said to have occurred over the weekend but the motive is not clear.

Social media photos captured the damage.

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Ramesh Lutchmedial: Each Tobago flight loses $40,800

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

A Caribbean Airlines plane

EACH CAL flight between Tobago and Trinidad loses at least $40,800 even if it is filled, Ramesh Lutchmedial, retired director general of Civil Aviation, claimed in a statement on Monday, urging a new model of flight operations.

Saying the Tobago Business Chamber blamed the airbridge for CAL’s losses, he said while the Tobago House of Assembly (THA) has called for more flights, CAL has consistently lost millions of dollars.

“CAL and its predecessor BWIA rarely achieved profitability throughout their existence. requiring taxpayers’ support to the tune of billions of dollars to remain airborne.

“More recently, the covid19 pandemic negatively impacted CAL’s ability to achieve the objectives of its recovery business.”

Lutchmedial said while stakeholders like the chamber, THA and hoteliers have a right to clamour for more flights, serious underlying issues must be tackled.

“The airline industry is extraordinarily complex and requires lots of cash to meet capital and operating expenses.

“For every route, airlines determine the cost to produce a seat on the flight and the realistic passenger loads at which the revenues generated meet the cost of operating the flight. This is known as the break-even load factor, and loads in excess of the break-even load factors realise operating profits.”

He said the airbridge does not afford passengers the luxury of showing up at the airport at any time to board a flight.

“Airline flight schedules are structured based on passenger demand, travel patterns and convenient travel times to achieve the optimum load factors. Besides, flight operations, flight-crew duty times, maintenance and air-traffic procedures are stringently regulated by law to ensure that the highest levels of operational safety are achieved.

“Further, on the domestic airbridge, demand is not always constant or balanced. Demand is directional on certain days, such as Fridays to Tobago and on Sundays to Trinidad.

“This means that on the return legs, the load factors can be low, with lots of empty seats. A critical point to note is that airline seats are uniquely ‘perishable’ products.”

Lutchmedial argued that the government has a public-service duty to provide air transport linkages to support social and economic activities in Tobago.

“Most passengers who are domiciled in Tobago and use the airbridge for essential travel may not be able to afford the full economic fare.

“Therefore, the solution may well lie in a two-tier fare system, a subsidised fare for Tobago residents and an economic fare for non-residents.”

He said in 2017 a CAL official told a parliamentary select committee the present airbridge airfare of $300 had been fixed for over ten years and did not cover $600-$700 operating costs, even with a $100 government subsidy.

Lutchmedial said today the cost of providing a return passenger seat on the airbridge using an ATR-72 aircraft is about $1,000.

“With a $400 revenue for a trip, this results in an operating deficit of $600 per return seat, and $40,800 per return flight using a 68-seater ATR72-600 aircraft. Even if airbridge flights are operated at 100 per cent load factors, the revenue earned by airfare and subsidy is well below the economic cost of providing the service.”

He said CAL must receive the cost of providing the airbridge service through an appropriate means such as a subsidy.

While subsidising flights to Tobago was not new and had even included the THA paying millions to subsidise foreign airlines, mainly from Europe, for airlift to support its tourism industry, he said Corporation Sole has mandated CAL to achieve self-sufficiency.

Lutchmedial said CAL was walking a tightrope between Corporation Sole’s mandate to become self-sufficient (due to dwindling government revenues/support) and stakeholders’ demand for increased capacity on the airbridge, whose losses were due to high operating costs and low revenues.

Saying all airlines, private and state, previously operating the airbridge could not do so profitably, as costs exceeded revenues, Lutchmedial said the existing airbridge model had never worked.

“The solution to the airbridge problems requires creativity, such as crafting a new airbridge model that is in keeping with modern airline marketing principles and practices and inclusive of aircraft type, capacity, frequency, airfare and subsidies.

“This new model can be jointly developed by all the stakeholders, including Corporation Sole, CAL, THA, Tobago Business Chamber and the hoteliers.

“However, key elements of a new airbridge model such as airfares and subsidies require the approval of government, in whose court the airbridge ball sits.”

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Judge: State must overhaul processes

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Justice Frank Seepersad. –

A HIGH COURT judge has advised the department which handles civil litigation for the State to reinvent its processes to ensure efficiency.

Justice Frank Seepersad gave the advice after he had to grant an extension to the State in a malicious prosecution claim brought by a Princes Town businesswoman who was arrested and charged with human trafficking in 2014.

Alana Lagan filed an application for default judgment last month after the State missed the deadline for filing its defence.

In asking for an extension, it was explained some internal administrative imbroglio caused by inconsistent record-keeping caused a miscalculation of the date the defence was due.

The court was told the non-compliance was inadvertent and not intentional.

When the matter came up on Monday, Seepersad granted the extension but warned he would not grant another. The State has until October 18 to get its case together or the matter will proceed on that day as an undefended trial.

The judge said the time for change had come as the “alarmingly frequent” requests by the State for extensions were now “unacceptable.”

He advised those in authority to revisit the status quo and effect a review of its processes.

“It has been a runaway train for 60 years…There must be a reinvention of the processes to ensure we emerge an efficient society.

“Ultimately inadvertence or administrative hiccups are not a good reason to delay the progress of matters before the court. Perhaps when the State starts having to find the money to pay out judgments it will realise the time for serious constitutional and process review is now.”

He was also taken aback by an assertion that the department was a “toothless bulldog” when it came to getting police officers to give instructions when lawsuits are filed.

“That is cause for concern. If that is the level of institutional dysfunction we face, then we need to assess where we are.

“We need to have cohesion in all the arms of the State.”

The State was represented by attorneys from the Chief State Solicitor’s department, Nairob Smart and Mary Davis.

In her claim, Lagan contends the police acted with malice. She is seeking compensation for false imprisonment, malicious prosecution as well as special damages of $53,084 for legal fees and loss of reputation. She is represented by attorneys Jagdeo Singh and Richard Jaggasar.

The lawsuit said police constantly harassed her husband after he refused to pay to have charges of possession of guns and ammunition against him dropped.

Eventually, the charges were dropped and Lagan’s husband reported the matter to the police’s Professional Standards Bureau before he was killed in St Joseph Village on May 23, 2015.

In June 2015, Lagan said, while the family was having a religious service for her husband, police arrested her for “exploiting” friends who had stayed at her home a year earlier. One of the friends claimed she was having an affair with Lagan’s husband after she was suspected of stealing money.

Lagan was charged with trafficking in persons, but after 24 court appearances, the charges were eventually dropped on July 31, 2019.

The claim said despite repeated attempts to get information on the police’s file on the human trafficking charges, none was forthcoming, leading her to question whether any existed.

Her burger-cart businesses also suffered, the lawsuit said.

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