Saturday, September 11, 2010

Baha Mar resolution before Parliament calls for more than 8,000 work permits for foreign workers

BAHA MAR WANTS WORK PERMITS FOR 8,150 NON-BAHAMIANS
By KRYSTEL ROLLE
Guardian Staff Reporter
krystel@nasguard.com:



Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham yesterday tabled a resolution in Parliament for the multi-billion dollar Baha Mar project, laying out some of the details of the proposed deal which would require the government to transfer more than 260 acres of land to the developers before any work even begins, and grant more than 8,000 work permits to foreigners.

"The resolution results from the fact that the foreign labor component intended during the construction of the resort exceeds levels ever experienced in The Bahamas and is beyond anything ever contemplated by my government,"Ingraham said.

Ingraham indicated that debate of the resolution would not begin until Baha Mar resolves the outstanding loan matter that it has with Scotiabank.

Baha Mar CEO Sarkis Izmirlian will travel to Toronto, Canada, next week to meet with bank officials on the issue.

The progress on the Baha Mar deal is being held up by the payment of an outstanding loan the company has with Scotiabank, reportedly worth around $160 million. The Cable Beach properties are being held as security.

While debate on the resolution is not expected to begin until near the end of September, the prime minister yesterday laid out some of the aspects of the deal to ensure that the Bahamian people are fully informed on the requirements, consequences and benefits that are projected to result for The Bahamas if the development proceeds as currently proposed.

The total value of the project is estimated at $2.6 billion. Ingraham revealed yesterday that a contract for the amount of $1,918,965,693 has been negotiated with the China State Construction Company as primary contractors for the project.

Ingraham said the terms of the funding obtained by the developers of the resort"include a requirement that the overwhelming majority, if not virtually all of the workers to be engaged on the core project, over the life of the project, be foreign workers--some 8,150 persons."

Baha Mar officials have stated that at no time will more than 5,000 foreigners be working on the site.

"It is projected that some 1,200 Bahamians will be engaged in the construction of the non-core project that is, the new West Bay Street, the new Commercial Village and the initial site preparation for the core project,"Ingraham added.

Using the construction phase of the Atlantis Resort as a comparison, Ingraham noted that before that was constructed his government established that the ratio of Bahamians to non-Bahamians on the site would not exceed 30 percent foreign to 70 percent Bahamian.

Ingraham said that was done despite the need at that time for large numbers of expatriate experts and labor for the efficient completion of the project.

He added that the established ratio was obtained during two phases of construction of the Kerzner International resorts under FNM administrations and was continued during the PLP government during the third phase expansion of the project.

Ingraham said based on Baha Mar's numbers, it is proposed that 71 percent of the workforce be foreign and 29 percent Bahamian.

"This represents a complete reversal of conditions imposed upon Kerzner, for example,"he said.

"What must be determined is whether this invaluable benefit of skills transfer and improved exposure to new technologies can or will occur in a project where contact between Bahamians and foreign experts is likely to be limited."

As previously reported, the Baha Mar project is to comprise six hotels with approximately 3,500 rooms and condominiums, an approximately 100,000 square foot casino, 200,000 square feet of convention facilities, a 20-acre beach and pool experience, an 18-hole golf course and a 60,000 square-foot retail village and additional residential products.

To achieve this, Ingraham explained that a large amount of government and crown land must be transferred to the developers.

The Radisson, now the Sheraton, was transferred to Baha Mar in 2005. The Wyndham Crystal Palace and the Nassau Beach Hotel are currently on leased crown land, the prime minister noted.

But Ingraham said the approval for the Baha Mar project requires the transfer of the land occupied by both hotel properties, the Hobby Horse Hall parcel, Fidelity Bank, Cecil Wallace-Whitfield Centre(which houses the Ministry of Finance and the Office of the Prime Minister), the Cable Beach Police Station and the old West Bay Street, new corridor number seven, 50 acres of Gladstone Road, the Prospect Ridge parcel, Water and Sewerage Corporation parcel, BEC Parcel, BECâ substation, plus an additional parcel of .783 acre for a total of 264.965 acres.

Ingraham said because of the conditions set by Baha Mar's financiers China Import Export Bank and the China State Construction Company these lands are required to be transferred in advance of the start of construction of the project.

"It is the position of my government that these lands will only be transferred for the expressed purpose of facilitating the development and that should the development not proceed the land must return to the government,"he said.

Baha Mar has said 8,00 permanent jobs are also projected once the resort is completed.

If the project receives Bahamas government approval, Baha Mar's first course of action would be to award nearly$60 million of construction contracts to six Bahamian contractors, representing early infrastructure works needed to prepare the site.

It is expected that all outstanding matters relating to the Scotiabank loan will be resolved within the next two-week period.

Debate is expected to start on September 23 or 24.

9/9/2010

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