Five Years Later . . .
By RUPERT MISSICK JR:
A political blog about Bahamian politics in The Bahamas, Bahamian Politicans - and the entire Bahamas political lot. Bahamian Blogger Dennis Dames keeps you updated on the political news and views throughout the islands of The Bahamas without fear or favor. Bahamian Politicians and the Bahamian Political Arena: Updates one Post at a time on Bahamas Politics and Bahamas Politicans; and their local, regional and international policies and perspectives.
BY ROYSTON JONES Jr.
Guardian Staff Reporter
royston@nasguard.com
Several residents of a Haitian village off Faith Avenue and Milo Butler Highway were observed sitting in a social hub of the community speaking a mixture of Creole and English.
Several residents, though initially reluctant to speak, welcomed The Guardian into their houses, to gain a first-hand look at living conditions.
Those houses had three to four rooms, including a kitchen, bedroom and common room, and some were outfitted with a bathroom and toilet.
Yolande Pierre, 31, said if the government decided to clear out the area, those who can not afford to rent elsewhere would be forced to move to Haiti or become homeless.
Pierre, a Haitian-Bahamian married to a Haitian man and mother of five, said The Bahamas is the only country she knows.
The report, which has yet to be released to the public, indicated researchers found a “marked indifference to the extremely unhealthy conditions by those that occupy the shanties”.
Researchers said “the presence of discarded human usage, waste, combined with the presence of domestic livestock is evident”.
They warned, “In time, many of the animals from these yards will enter the food chain — as owners of the livestock observed in one particular shanty — and be sold to grocery and wholesale meat outlets as well as [used for] their own consumption.”
While garbage littered the outskirts of the community, the area appeared clean, well kept and the only odor present was that of food being prepared.
Pierre said some residents have inside toilets and those who do not use a shared facility that is attached to a man-made cesspit.
“People say the shanty towns are bad, but I don’t see it being bad,” Pierre said. “The only thing that matters is the garbage and people do the very best they can to keep the environment clean.”
“Bahamians would say we don’t pay any bills, but if we had a choice of paying bills where the government would build us some homes with rent - though Bahamian society would not allow it - for the Haitian-Bahamian sake, we would be happy to do it.”
Frederic Bien-Amie, another resident, pointed out a sign that read “no dumping”. He said the community is a close-knit one that assists each other.
One such resident was Sarah Phillis, whose house had no electricity or water supply, though the 50-year-old said she was happy to use the shared outhouse toilet.
“Everyone tries to keep their yards clean,” Bien-Amie said. “I don’t have any garbage in this yard. I tell everybody, ‘keep your yard clean.’”
Members of the community clean the shared outhouse, Bien-Amie said.
Meanwhile, in a Haitian village located on Montgomery Avenue off Carmichael Road, several residents said the area is being developed to become more self-sustaining.
During a tour of the area, one resident, who did not wish to be named, pointed out a small vegetable farm, chicken and duck coop and an outhouse attached to a cesspit.
He said residents find the term shanty town degrading and discriminatory, and prefer the term Haitian communities. He felt the report was not an accurate reflection of his community.
“Don’t think these people are nasty, some of them have toilets,” the resident said.
“You have areas in New Providence with outside toilets, people running outside to get water on the main road. The government needs to deal with that first.”
Guerline Petit-Charles, who lives with her mother and father in that community shared that resident’s views.
Asked about the report, which warns of a serious and growing threat to public health, Petit-Charles said many residents are doing the best they can, and while they want more for their families, without employment or assistance they have to make do.
“I don’t think they throw any garbage or any waste in plastic bags or anything like that,” said Petit- Charles, who told us she has been searching for work for three years.
“They build their outside bathrooms where they dig a sewer hole and build it up just how they do it for a cesspit.”
May 15, 2013
| By: | Llonella Gilbert |
| Bahamas Information Services | |
| May 7, 2013 |
A bad gamble
Gaming Bill resurrects calls for end to discrimination
By CANDIA DAMES
Guardian News Editor
candia@nasguard.com
The government of Prime Minister Perry Christie had another bad week last week.
In fact, it seems the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) administration has been tying itself into one strangling knot after another.
Leading up to the first anniversary of its May 7 victory, it is finding itself increasingly on the defensive and has been making the kinds of moves that awaken public angst and weaken the confidence of citizens in their government.
An increasingly hostile and confusing tone on work permits, a highly publicized immigration blunder at Atlantis resort and the junior national security minister’s suggestion that the Americans are fueling our crime problem by sending us criminal deportees were all matters that caught our attention last week.
But it was public reaction to The Nassau Guardian’s revelation on the proposed Gaming Act 2013, and an announcement that web shop layoffs could come as early as this week, that showed most clearly that the government has a lot of work to do to stem what seems to be rising anti-PLP sentiment.
Months after the failed January 28 referendum, gambling continues to be one of the most divisive and unnecessarily distracting issues in The Bahamas.
In the lead up to that referendum, there was great confusion about the process.
In the weeks and months since, there remains great confusion on the way forward for the web shop sector.
By far, the matter that is dominating national discussion is that proposed act on gambling.
As we reported, it would permit holders of casino licenses in The Bahamas to facilitate online and mobile gambling.
With a deal sealed with Las Vegas’ Cantor Gaming, Atlantis is set to offer its guests mobile gaming as of this week.
Minister of Tourism Obie Wilchcombe, who has responsibility for gaming, said yesterday this will be offered during a “test period” and the property would have to apply for the relevant license to continue mobile gaming and eventually introduce online gaming.
The failed gambling referendum notwithstanding, many people are insulted by the discriminatory bill that would allow Atlantis, Baha Mar and the holders of other casino licenses in The Bahamas to do legally what is being denied Bahamian business people.
The bill has been in the works since shortly after the Christie administration came to office last year.
It was developed outside any considerations connected to the gambling referendum, and the government worked closely with industry stakeholders in its development.
The outrage over the government’s ongoing discriminatory approach to the gambling issue is most understandable when added to the fact that the new bill excludes permanent residents and work permit holders from the class of people not permitted to gamble legally.
The bill speaks only to the prohibition of Bahamian citizens.
Under existing legislation, permanent residents and work permit holders are also prohibited from gambling.
For Bahamians, the move could not be more insulting.
Another provision of the new bill would allow people outside The Bahamas to gamble via the website of a local gaming license holder.
But those people must be in jurisdictions that allow online gambling.
Wilchcombe said there will be tight controls to guard against Bahamians gambling from other jurisdictions.
REFORMS
While Bahamians ought to be concerned over the matter, any hysteria and anger toward the investors who have long been pushing for these industry reforms are misdirected, in my view.
As good and valued investors, Atlantis and Baha Mar deserve to have legislation passed for the protection and improvement of the gaming sector and the tourism industry.
The decision to block Bahamians from gambling in local casinos is not the investors’ decision.
The casino operators in fact have said more than once that they would welcome Bahamians gambling in casinos.
The decision to keep Bahamians from gambling in casinos is the government’s continuation of a controversial and discriminatory decades-old policy.
Wilchcombe said yesterday the policy has served us well and it would need to be carefully examined before any changes are made because there are serious social and economic considerations.
“We have always restricted Bahamians from participating in the gaming activity at our casinos and it was in fact the best compromise for a tourism destination and a country that has a strong opposition from Bahamians participating, particularly the church,” he said, referring to the initial decision on casino gambling several decades ago.
“Way back then, it was a happy compromise and I think that it has proven to be beneficial for the country and it has not hurt The Bahamas.
“We have been able to build an economy without income tax, etc. and it’s really because of our progressive tourism industry, one which included gaming.”
Wilchcombe also rightly pointed to the need and desire for the gaming aspect of tourism to be more competitive — thus the need for the Gaming Bill.
Anyone who takes offense to this bill ought to take that up with their government — not the holders of casino licenses who have for years been working with the government (the former administration included) to effect these necessary reforms for a more competitive gaming industry.
In a paper outlining recommendations for reforms, casino licensees note that in recent years, casino gaming has expanded worldwide.
To stay competitive, the largest jurisdictions have been forced to update their regulations to accommodate shifting consumer tastes, technology and potential sources of new tax revenues, the document points out.
It adds that Nevada, Macau, Singapore, New Jersey and the U.S. Gulf Coast states have structured their laws to reflect recent developments.
Casino operators are hoping the reforms outlined in the Gaming Bill would drive gaming revenues and create a sustainable competitive advantage.
They made 14 recommendations to the government in a document titled “Guide to modernization of casino regulations in The Bahamas”.
One of the recommendations calls for segmented VIP gaming suites and salons. It would allow enclosed gaming rooms to be located anywhere on the resort campus of a licensed casino.
Other recommendations include credit card payments for chips and duty free exemption for gaming equipment and interactive/mobile gaming.
The licensees also proposed the impostion of an entry level for permanent residents and work permit holders.
The document notes that in Singapore, residents must buy a daily pass for US$100 or yearly pass for US$2,000 for casino entry, limiting access to those with financial means.
Wilchcombe said without critical reforms, the gaming sector would lose ground.
THREAT
A separate but very closely related issue involves the web shop industry, which is reportedly suffering under a threat of raids.
Bahamian citizens must continue to demand an end to discrimination on gaming.
Had the referendum passed on January 28, one assumes the government would have been well on its way in structuring a properly regulated web shop sector.
But Bahamian citizens would still have been barred from casino gambling.
The absence of that question from the ballot is one reason some people gave for voting against the regularization and taxation of web shops and the establishment of a national lottery.
It is also the reason some people gave for staying away from the polls altogether. Voter turnout in fact was less than 50 percent.
Prime Minister Perry Christie has promised that while the casino question was not on the January 28 ballot, it would be a question on the ballot of a promised constitutional referendum if the Constitutional Commission recommends that it be addressed.
It would be unfortunate if the discriminatory nature of the bill derails the industry’s push toward modernization and reform.
But the failed referendum should not be taken as a true reflection of the views of the electorate on gambling.
Had the government taken its time and addressed gambling for Bahamians in its totality and in a clear process where adequate information was provided, it might have avoided anger and confusion over this very necessary step it is taking for casino owners.
Bahamian businessespeople who have for years been operating web shops now feel like second-class citizens, as do Bahamians who are being told about the provision that would provide for work permit holders and permanent residents to take part in an industry they have been told to keep out.
Wilchcombe has said the Cabinet will review the bill tomorrow.
Perhaps it would also examine why so many people have reacted so strongly against it.
April 29, 2013
BEC and the government’s debt position
The Nassau Guardian Editorial
The Bahamas Electricity Corporation (BEC) is in crisis. It has a quarter of a billion dollars in debt the government has to back, it may lose $50 million this year and it is unable to provide enough power to keep the lights on in the high-demand summer season.
Successive political administrations have made all kinds of decisions over the last decade that have brought BEC to its knees. The dysfunctional state of the corporation is now increasingly having harmful effects on The Bahamas.
The high cost of power produced by BEC serves as a large across-the-board tax on Bahamians, increasing the cost of goods and services. The summer blackouts inconvenience businesses and homeowners. And now BEC’s debt burden could hurt the country’s credit rating.
Moody’s is warning the government that rising debt held by public sector corporations such as BEC could hurt the country’s rating going forward. According to its latest credit opinion, The Bahamas retains its negative outlook due to the difficulty in achieving fiscal consolidation necessary to stabilize debt and increase revenue in the short term. A failure to reverse the recent trend of rising debt will place downward pressure on the country’s future rating, the report added, particularly with the “crystallization” of liabilities held by BEC.
The Bahamas’ bond rating was downgraded to Baa1 from A3 last December.
The government says it has 60 energy proposals before it and it is in the process of reviewing those proposals. One of those proposals is from SGI Global Holdings Ltd. It is represented by attorney John Bostwick and thinks a power barge concept makes far more sense than any of the other energy proposals before the government.
Executives from the firm have drafted a proposal arguing it could slash the average cost of electricity from $0.40 per kilowatt-hour to $0.28 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) in the first year if allowed to enter the marketplace. In year seven, the international firm says it could reduce the cost of electricity to $0.25 per kWh.
At some point, the government has to make a decision on the “major change” it will create in the local energy sector. The status quo is a barrier to economic growth, an annoyance to the public and it harms the Bahamian credit position.
If private firms are able to enter the market and assist the government by providing energy at lower rates than BEC, why not quickly move to allow private firms to assist?
We are at the end of the first year of this Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) term. It went by quickly. Despite all the talk thus far about BEC and energy, under the PLP BEC continues to spiral. A paradigm shift is needed in the Bahamian energy sector.
If the PLP waits too long to decide on this change The Bahamas will be further harmed, more money will be wasted and the change desired may not take effect until after the next general election, as energy plants take time to set up.
We hope the Cabinet understands that success in bringing down the cost of power is as much a priority now as our crime and unemployment problems.
April 20, 2013