** Ministry VROMI Traffic Alert: Partial road closure of Intersection Arbutus and Flamboyant road **

** Ministry VROMI Traffic Alert: Partial road closure of Intersection Arbutus and Flamboyant road **

Ministry of Public Housing, Environment, Spatial Development and Infrastructure (Ministry VROMI), announces that there will be a partial road closure at the intersection of Arbutus road and Flamboyant road on Tuesday, October 1st.

The aforementioned will take place from 9.00AM to 11.00AM.

The closure is in connection with the pouring of concrete.

Motorists are advised to be vigilant and observant of the traffic diversion directional signs.

Ministry VROMI apologizes for any inconvenience this may cause.

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MinFinance Actions Disrespectful – Silveria Jacobs

The pathetic attempts of the former Chair to throw shade at this new majority in Parliament is amazing but not at all surprising.
Parliament convened public meeting number 34 which had been originally called by the then members in opposition, on Thursday which was supposed to start at 2pm. It was noted that the parties, Minister Geerlings, NRPB representatives Claret Conner and Mr. Knotnerus were not present. MinFin Geerlings had informed Parliament via his cabinet on the 25th that he could not attend as the PM was absent as well as the MinTeatt. However, the meeting had been convened orginally with PM and MinFin and Parliament had been notified by the PM’s cabinet on Sept. 19th (1 week prior) that MinFin would represent her and that the NRPB would also be present.
The secretariat of Parliament immediately notified Min. Geerlings during the morning of the 26th that his presence was expected as it had been already verified on 19 Sept in a letter from the Cabinet of the Prime Minister. Again. Min Geerlings refused to honor this request as is expected by his function.
The blatant disrespect to Parliament shown by the Minister of Finance is what should be the focus here. Both him and the representatives of the NRPB were expected. Neither showed.
Upon request of the Chair, the acting Prime Minister was summoned to fill in as the answers were professed to be ready since Sept 19th from the PM’s office. To his credit Acting PM Smith did come, but without the answers or any knowledge of the subject. The minister was given the opportunity and agreed to return in an hour with the responses and the meeting was adjourned at 3 pm.
When OV 34 was reconvened at 4 pm, the Acting PM had not returned and had not forwarded any message to inform Parliament that he was indeed on his way, as such Parliament did not see fit to continue the fiasco of this demmissionaire government, intent on making a mockery of the people of St. Maarten.
As such the meeting was adjourned a few minutes past 4 and will be reconvened as soon as possible.
The actions of the Finance Minister is what caused the actual negativity surrounding this meeting. The new coalition, as members of Parliament who requested this meeting in the first place, several months ago, are very much interested in the responses prepared and the way forward with the recovery for St. Maarten and its Airport in order to make necessary upgrades and repairs in a timely manner.
As members of Parliament we are mandated to continue to hold government accountable, even those Ministers of Government who have received motions of non-confidence, and no longer see the need to answer to the people. The care-taker government remains wholly accountable for all actions currently being taken, and if any actions or decisions are taken outside of the prescribed limitations then they will be held personally accountable for such.

Silveria Jacobs
Leader of the National Alliance
NA Faction Leader in Parliament

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Sarah Wescot Williams: The Clock is ticking

SINT MAARTEN (PHILIPSBURG) – “It should be emphasized that St. Maarten has already complied with most of the AML/CTF recommendations. The last few recommendations to be implemented on St. Maarten have however generated the most contention,” Leader of the United Democrats (UD) Member of Parliament (MP) Sarah Wescot Williams said in a press statement on Sunday.

“Understandably so, because these recommendations have been inserted into our Civil, respectively Criminal Codes. In brief, the matter of shares in bearer’s name will no longer be possible (Civil Code). The offenses of money laundering and terrorism financing will be named as such and penalized as such (Criminal Code).

“Thirdly and most importantly, the entire Criminal Procedure Code has been revised, following the revision of the Criminal Code several years ago. The Criminal Procedure Code regulates the process of punishment, prosecution, sentencing, appealing, due process etc., not only for money laundering and terrorist acts, but for all criminal offenses.

“As with all legislation, the above Codes had to be handled in Central Committee and then in a public meeting, where they will be voted on. Due to the differences in opinion regarding these laws, their effects or no effects as some in parliament have claimed, and not wanting to risk a voting down of these laws, I kept asking of the minister that he reviews the concerns expressed by Members of Parliament and seek a compromise.

“I recommend that the general public check back in the meetings of parliament online to hear the views as expressed by members of parliament. I also requested the offices of the Court and the Public Prosecutor as well as the Bar Association to provide Parliament with their views on the topic of Crown Witness. It should be noted that the Crown Witness is permissible and practiced today in our justice system.

“We are faced with the question of letting it remain as is (jurisprudence) or giving it a place in our Criminal Procedure Code. Once written (codified), it can be easier contested and challenged. The Ministry of Justice and the Secretariat of parliament are now working on the reports from the Central Committee meetings on these laws, in order to proceed to the Public Meeting.

“In the meantime, the clock is ticking towards November. If the parliament is serious about avoiding a statement from the CFATF, that could potentially cripple our entire financial system, this matter can be resolved as follows:

1. The minister declared himself willing to address the “automatic de-registering” of foundations etc. by the Chamber of Commerce.

2. The Ombudsman’s check (6 weeks period) should be included in the law to ensure there are no constitutional infringements. That is not currently the case.

3. The much-contended CRIMINAL PROCEDURE CODE, if passed, will only go into effect by another NATIONAL ORDINANCE. So, parliament will have another opportunity to vote on the effective date of our new Criminal Procedure Code. I will propose when we get so far to consider a different implementation date for some parts of the Criminal Procedure Code. Like this, parliament’s understanding for the risk of non compliance will be evident from the passing of the law AND parliament’s concerns for some parts of the law, due to time pressure, can be allayed by legislating the implementation only after further and in-depth analysis of those specific parts.

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Power Outage Gumbs Drive Middle Region SXM

Please note that Gumbs Drive in Middle Region and surrounding areas (from the entrance adjacent to Madame Estate) are currently experiencing a power outage. Every effort is being made to restore power to the affected areas in the shortest possible time.

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Birds survive hurricanes — unless they’re already on the edge of extinction

In a catastrophic hurricane such as Dorian, the loss of lives and homes can be overwhelming. But even in the midst of devastating sadness and disbelief, a far less urgent but perennial question can tug at the back of the mind. What is the impact of these storms on wild creatures, such as birds?

It is too soon to know the extent of Dorian’s impact, and really too soon to ask. Ecological post-mortems are nowhere near the first order of business. But interviews with scientists and the findings in a paper published Sept. 15 by Ecology Letters suggest that many birds are resilient, and that when a hurricane does push a species over the brink, it is almost always a species that humans have put there in the first place.

If what we’re worried about is extinction, “we’re the driving force,” said David Steadman, curator of ornithology at the Florida Museum of Science, who has done a vast amount of research on Caribbean birds.

By destroying the environments where birds live, introducing alien predators and damaging the environment in other ways, humans gradually put birds, and of course other species, at risk. A hurricane or another disaster may deliver a final punch, but it is not the underlying cause of extinction. Christopher Elphick, an ornithologist at the University of Connecticut and one of the authors of the new paper, said development and sea level rise were the slow and sure killers.

He compared it to heart disease: “Eating just a little too much fat in your diet is what causes the heart attack. But shoveling snow is what pushes you over the edge.”

Birds do die in hurricanes, of course, and suffer other indignities. Dorian blew some to Nova Scotia. And a buoy cam southeast of Charleston, S.C., caught images of some hiding out in the hurricane’s eye. Who knows where they ended up? Fortunately, Hurricane Humberto, which had people in the Bahamas worried about a second hit, took another path.

Scientists concentrate on species and subspecies. In terms of the Bahamas, only speculation is possible at the moment. One species on the extreme edge, the Bahama nuthatch, only one or two of which were known to be living before Dorian, may well have been pushed to extinction. Others that are in trouble, like the Bahama parrot, might have suffered little impact.

Diana Bell of the University of East Anglia said that researchers from her lab found a Bahama nuthatch last year. That’s one single bird. She said another team reported finding two.

The Bahama nuthatch was already thought to be extinct before Dorian nailed Grand Bahama, where one or two nuthatches may have still been alive.

“This could have been the coup de grâce for the nuthatch,” Steadman said.

Steadman, who has been researching birds in the Caribbean and elsewhere for many years, said that in contrast the Bahama parrot — which is in trouble, but not as severely — might have done just fine.

Much of the parrot population dwells on the south of the island, which was hit but not devastated. And the parrots nest in cavities in the island’s limestone, and no doubt would have hunkered down during the storm. “I would doubt if there’s so much negative impact on that parrot population at all,” he said.

Other birds that are struggling there are the Bahama swallow and the Bahama oriole.

This endangered red-cockaded woodpecker is feeding young at the nest, in a cavity of a longleaf pine in Georgia. Active management and restoration of longleaf forests can help recover this species.(John Maxwell for U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (CC BY 2.0))

This endangered red-cockaded woodpecker is feeding young at the nest, in a cavity of a longleaf pine in Georgia. Active management and restoration of longleaf forests can help recover this species. (John Maxwell for U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (CC BY 2.0))

Past hurricanes have hit certain bird populations very hard, but selectively. Hurricane Hugo in 1989 brought Category 5 winds to the Francis Marion National Forest in South Carolina that knocked down the old growth nesting trees of the red-cockaded woodpecker. The bird nests in tree cavities in old-growth forests, and the storm snapped old trees in two; 87% of the forest’s 1,765 cavities were destroyed.

Joseph M. Wunderle Jr. of the U.S. Forest Service, who is based in Puerto Rico, said the managers of the forest responded with artificial cavities to help save the woodpeckers that remained.

Wunderle has studied and written about Caribbean birds and hurricanes for decades. Hurricane Maria, he said, may have knocked out a group of Puerto Rican parrots that live at a high elevation. “The official count now is two birds in the Luquillo Mountains,” he said. The power of the hurricane played a role. Colleagues of his told him that when Maria struck as a strong Category 4 hurricane in September 2017, it killed 17 of 20 parrots wearing tracking devices. “They found them dead under fallen trees and tree branches,” he said.

The St. Kitts bullfinch also fell victim to hurricanes in the late 19th century, Wunderle said. The bird survived for a while and disappeared, he said. It had lived in a mountain forest on St. Kitts, feeding on fruits and seeds, and the plants took a long time to recover. Why didn’t it move to the lowlands? At lower elevations wild areas had been replaced with fields of sugar cane, by humans.

Insect eaters do a lot better, Wunderle said. Even if adult insects are lost in a hurricane, there are eggs, pupae, larvae. And there is a lot of dead wood, which many insects love.

The Cozumel thrasher is another example. The island was hit by Hurricane Gilbert in 1988 and Hurricane Roxanne in 1995. The introduction of alien predators to the island may have contributed to its disappearance.

When bird populations are reasonably widespread, they can, however, be quite resilient in the long term.

Salt marsh sparrow Professor Chris Elphick, of University of Connecticut, holds a female saltmarsh sparrow after she was banded by his student assistants. (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service/Charlotte Murtishaw)

Salt marsh sparrow Professor Chris Elphick, of University of Connecticut, holds a female saltmarsh sparrow after she was banded by his student assistants. (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service/Charlotte Murtishaw)

Elphick, his colleague Chris Field and other researchers from the University of Connecticut were inspired to look at the effects of catastrophic storms on marsh birds because they were in the midst of surveying bird populations in Eastern coastal marshes when Hurricane Sandy struck in 2012.

STRENGTH IN NUMBERS

They were surprised to see that the effect on bird populations was not that great. Individual birds certainly suffered, and that often prompts an immediate reaction from the public and scientists. “People see dead birds and say, ‘Oh my God,'” Elphick said. But individual deaths don’t necessarily mean trouble for the species.

Their team wanted to understand the long-term prospects for bird species over 20 years after a disaster. They created a computer model and after putting in data on the size of a population, its pattern of reproduction and other factors, they ran simulations to see how bad a species would have to be hit by a disaster for it to have an effect on its long-term prospects.

Clapper rail at Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge. (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)

Clapper rail at Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge. (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)

They looked at four birds: the clapper rail, willet, saltmarsh sparrow and seaside sparrow. For saltmarsh sparrows and clapper rails, almost all adults had to be killed for there to be a change in the long-term prospects of the population. The seaside sparrows and willets weren’t quite as robust, but they still needed to experience reproductive failures of more than 75% for their long-term survival to be threatened.

In general the team found that the coastal birds they studied were highly resilient to individual storms. They believe their simplified model — which concentrates on deaths and reproductive failures, not the strength of storms — could be useful for projecting what is likely to happen to other species facing disasters.

Of course, Elphick said, “there are two big caveats to our general result.” The species they studied are very small, or very localized. And that is exactly the situation for island birds, particularly where humans have changed the environment.

Climate change could bring an increase in frequency and strength of hurricanes that could change their calculations somewhat, Elphick said. But the biggest threats to the birds he studied are the gradual erosion of habitats by human development and, for marsh birds, development of the marshes where they live, and rising sea levels, which make average tides and storms more dangerous during nesting periods.

As Bell put it: “Birds evolved to withstand hurricanes. They didn’t evolve to withstand destruction by humans.”

https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2019/sep/30/are-humans-birds-no-1-danger-20190930/?features-style

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Video Curaçao Pride was the busiest ever

The Gay Pride was held for the seventh time in recent days in Curaçao. According to the organization, more than a thousand LGBT people and their sympathizers ran a record in a colorful procession from Riffort in Otrobanda, via the Pontjesbrug to Wilhelminaplein. The Pride Walk was the highlight of the Pridweeek on Curaçao where a few parties and gatherings were also scheduled.

[wpvideo J6zB2Ndp]
The Pride Walk started seven years ago with a handful of people in a parking lot just outside Willemstad, but has since grown into a true folk festival (video). The LGBT community is acceptingly accepted and companies are also going to sponsor the annual event. “A very good development,” said one of the organizers in the local media. He also called on politicians to hurry with the bill that should make same-sex marriage possible. A year ago, during the Pride, a call was made to open up marriage to same-sex couples. A bill was submitted in June this year stating that marriage should not be restricted to a man and a woman alone. The bill is now being reviewed by the Advisory Council and will be submitted to Parliament shortly. If the law then reaches a majority, the marriage in Curaçao will also be opened to same-sex couples. The chance that the new law will actually succeed seems small because both the population and politicians do not seem ready for the legalization of same-sex marriage.

Curaçao is an autonomous country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands and marriage is still not open to same-sex couples there. The island also has no registered partnership for gay couples. A same-sex marriage can, however, be credited to the civil status of the island. A marriage between two people of the same sex performed in the Netherlands is valid throughout the Kingdom. So also on Curaçao.29-09-2019 | The Gay Pride was held for the seventh time in recent days in Curaçao. According to the organization, more than a thousand LGBT people and their sympathizers ran a record in a colorful procession from Riffort in Otrobanda, via the Pontjesbrug to Wilhelminaplein. The Pride Walk was the highlight of the Pridweeek on Curaçao where a few parties and gatherings were also scheduled.

The Pride Walk started seven years ago with a handful of people in a parking lot just outside Willemstad, but has since grown into a true folk festival (video). The LGBT community is acceptingly accepted and companies are also going to sponsor the annual event. “A very good development,” said one of the organizers in the local media. He also called on politicians to hurry with the bill that should make same-sex marriage possible. A year ago, during the Pride, a call was made to open up marriage to same-sex couples. A bill was submitted in June this year stating that marriage should not be restricted to a man and a woman alone. The bill is now being reviewed by the Advisory Council and will be submitted to Parliament shortly. If the law then reaches a majority, the marriage in Curaçao will also be opened to same-sex couples. The chance that the new law will actually succeed seems small because both the population and politicians do not seem ready for the legalization of same-sex marriage.

Curaçao is an autonomous country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands and marriage is still not open to same-sex couples there. The island also has no registered partnership for gay couples. A same-sex marriage can, however, be credited to the civil status of the island. A marriage between two people of the same sex performed in the Netherlands is valid throughout the Kingdom. So also on Curaçao.

https://youtu.be/ijMs7Z4qgR0

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Video Dabo Helps Busby in Doha 2019 IAAF Championship

[wpvideo rs367ym2]

Video Dabo Helps Busby in Doha 2019 IAAF Championship

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What does it mean to survive after Dorian? On Caribbean disasters, development and climate crisis

The stories of rescue and relief in The Bahamas since Hurricane Dorian have left me and so many in heartbreak and reflecting on what it means to survive – from the man who rode out the entire storm hunkered in the mangroves of Abaco, to the people who held onto trees during the storm surge, to the sick baby found in The Mudd with a father who didn’t leave for fear of being deported. The injured survivors (Bahamians and Haitians) at the Princess Margaret Hospital in New Providence telling doctors that they don’t want treatment, they don’t want to live, because they have lost everyone – sole survivors of families drowned or swept away in the storm. The Haitian migrants (now twice displaced) calling for the bodies of their loved ones to be found and buried with respect and dignity. Haitian migrants living in fear of deportation and hiding even with the promise of the Bahamian government that deportations are supposedly on pause. Bahamians trying to enter the United States to visit family and get away in the aftermath of Hurricane Dorian and being denied entry. The explicit xenophobia and framing of our people as ‘very very bad’, ‘drug dealers’ and ‘gang members’. Haitian children being deported by the Bahamian government. These stories are hard to hold or imagine, yet we must.

Entire lives are on hold across The Bahamas – from those evacuated and displaced at shelters across New Providence to those in Grand Bahama cleaning up and clearing out what is left of their homes. Imagine being a poor or working class Bahamian family. Imagine being a family or sole survivor, having lost everything or almost everything, and trying to pick up the pieces. Imagine the grief and suffering, the psychological trauma, of survivors. Imagine being the most scorned in this country, the ones blamed and scapegoated for almost every social problem. Imagine being a Haitian migrant right now living in The Bahamas, or living elsewhere across the region. Some of us don’t have to imagine any of these – either we know people experiencing this or we are experiencing it – the proximity to disasters, the trauma, of being treated as other, less than, not equal to, expendable or deportable.

And so I ask all of us in the Caribbean – where is our collective outrage, our climate action movement, our migrant rights movement, where is our action against unsustainable development and neoliberal agendas, where is our intersectional politics and action?

As the Global Climate Strike erupted around the world on 20th September, I couldn’t help but feel a sense of hopelessness across our region. To be sure, there were a few important actions, most notably the successful protest against mining in rural Jamaica to save Cockpit Country. In Trinidad, young people planned and led a march with 150 people around the Queen’s Park Savannah. Representing the region at the UN Climate Summit, we had 11 Caribbean youth attending the first ever Youth Climate Summit; and Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley demanding climate action and justice for all small island nations, warning that there will be mass migration if the climate crisis continues. Compared to thousands who marched in strike events and actions across the globe, there was mostly silence in our region, especially from leaders. Where was our regional climate action, our regional uprising?

Perhaps it is being in the midst of relief and recovery from Hurricane Dorian just a few weeks ago, still in recovery from Hurricane Maria just two years ago, from Hurricane Matthew three years ago, from the earthquake in Haiti a decade ago, and on and on. But perhaps the disasters we don’t talk about enough or even at all are the most dangerous – the disaster of tourism development, over reliance and dependence on foreign investment, continued exploitation of migrant labour, and the failures of our post-neo-colonial states. Maybe we are too afraid to speak or act. Maybe we haven’t done enough to educate the public about climate change or social and environmental justice as one connected struggle. Maybe we spend too much time blaming individual consumers instead of placing more blame and accountability on private sector, industries, and governments. Maybe the environmental movement in the Caribbean has failed with its middle and upper class politics. Maybe other movements have failed to show the connections between social inequalities and climate change. Maybe it’s easier to blame ‘immigrants’, ‘gays’, and all those scary ‘others’ for our social problems.

Maybe we have no plan B for economic development, and so we continue to build a tourism industry that does not care about our sustainability or future outside the usual recipe of sun, sand, sea and festivals. Maybe we fear calling out the ways tourism dependent small islands rely on the bits of income from cruise ships which pollute our waters and leave their garbage. Maybe we have not learned lessons from the disasters of structural adjustment policies that leave our countries in debt and too many of our people in poverty and despair. Maybe those of us with oil and other natural resources still believe that will save us. Maybe we still believe the lies of globalization, development and progress in the pursuit of a place in the global capitalist market. Maybe we believe that our (post-neo) colonial masters will save us. Maybe it’s all too overwhelming and unimaginable as we live in the apocalypse of climate crisis now.

After Tropical Storm Karen, which affected us in Trinidad and Tobago just a week ago with mass flooding across both islands, I write this in fear and panic about our future, in deep anxiety about our silence and complacency, in solidarity across our precarious Caribbean region, especially with the most vulnerable of our people. We know we are in crisis. We feel it with each hurricane and rainy season and rising temperatures and seas. We see it as we drive along our coastlines with erosion and destruction of our mangroves; we experience it with dry season and forest fires, with clearcutting for tourism and other development projects. We hear it with each report of coral reefs bleaching, fish disappearing, record-setting heat waves and storms, mass extinctions, and rain forests on fire across the Amazon and Sub-Saharan Africa. We smell it with the pollution and garbage burning in our landfills, across our small islands – where we produce less than we import, where on the smallest islands we import way more than we need for tourists and migrants with status and money, who consume more than we do. We touch it in one way or another through the reliance on migrant labour needed to fuel our externally dependent economies, to do work that nationals don’t want to do, and to rebuild in the aftermath of disasters. We know it when we hear of yet another deal on a development project, a new cruise ship port, a set of condos, a new hotel, or more exploration for oil and gas. We understand it in the aftermath of hurricanes when new development deals are signed before recovery has even started for locals who have lost their homes. This is happening now in Abaco and Grand Bahama just four weeks after Hurricane Dorian. Bodies are still buried under rubble, islands completely devastated and there are already plans to sell land to the highest bidders.

We are complicit when we don’t call out all the ways our small islands are made more vulnerable and marginalized in these unnatural disasters, the ways we are exploited and then exploit others.

Our Caribbean region is one of the most tourism dependent regions in the world. And so when I read the Forbes article by Daphne Ewing-Chow on 20th September 2019, titled “Caribbean Islands Are The Biggest Plastic Polluters Per Capita In The World,” with no mention of the almost 40 million tourists per year who visit (mostly on cruise ships), I was furious. It’s not that the article is completely wrong – indeed we do have a serious problem with plastic consumption and waste per capita that is outrageous – but rather it’s that the author fails to include a huge part of the problem, which is tourism and neo-liberal development. It’s no coincidence that most of the top ten Caribbean polluters are also the most dependent on tourism —Antigua & Barbuda, St. Kitts & Nevis, Barbados, St. Lucia, The Bahamas, Grenada, Anguilla and Aruba.

This article was circulated on Global Climate Strike day. Perhaps the goal of the author was to name our small island nations as also being major contributors to marine waste. While the author does identify “inadequate waste management” as a root cause of the problem, the landscape is complex and wrapped up in quite literally not having enough space or resources to manage the waste of our own residents, much less millions of tourists. Recent climate change research has identified serious concerns about the “carbon footprint of global tourism,” especially for the Caribbean. The true cost of tourism is one not usually included in popular media conversations about climate change and pollution – with few exceptions such as the 2018 article in Grist by Justine Calma, “The Caribbean on your vacation but suffers from its carbon footprint”. These are the global relations of power, pollution and unsustainable development not many are willing to face – because we are overly reliant and dependent with no plan B. Meanwhile, visitors from the Global North flock to our shores, consume and exploit because that is the promise of paradise.

But no one in paradise is supposed to talk about the ugly truths of exploitation, environmental destruction for development, competition over scarce resources, the limited supply of fresh water, or the diversion of resources (water and electricity) to hotels and foreign-owned wealthy homes. Nor are we supposed to talk about the ways limited jobs in “development projects” turn us against each other, or the horrifying untold stories of migrants fleeing one set of unlivable conditions only to find themselves abused and exploited. We see this with many Haitian migrants living in The Bahamas and Dominican Republic, as many Venezuelan migrants seeking asylum right now in Trinidad and Tobago, as many Guyanese migrants experience hardships in Barbados, as too many. We can keep this going all the way back to all the ways our Caribbean people have had to move and relocate in search of something better. Isn’t that what we all want? Something better?

We need these harsh truths and untold stories to be spoken, analysed, and understood, in the face of the many unnatural disasters we are living. We are in this together, our survival depends on it – our region, our people, our vulnerable islands of complex, unique and shared histories. We need honest reflections, sustainable solutions, tangible empathy and reasonings, regional actions and uprisings and revolutionary decolonial justice-visioning in our Caribbean to survive.

https://www.stabroeknews.com/2019/09/30/features/in-the-diaspora/what-does-it-mean-to-survive-after-dorian-on-caribbean-disasters-development-and-climate-crisis/amp/

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CARIBBEAT: Fund-raiser and New York government assistance to aid Bahamas survivors of Hurricane Dorian

CARIBBEAT: Fund-raiser and New York government assistance to aid Bahamas survivors of Hurricane Dorian
www.msn.com
New York City and State and private groups are helping with many needs of Hurricane Dorian survivors in the Bahamas by responding with assistance in many forms.

The island nation’s Abaco and Grand Bahama islands were hit hard by the hurricane, leaving scores dead, hundreds missing and thousands homeless. But help is still coming.

* Irie Jam Radio 93.5FM/Irie Jam 360 and One Caribbean are participating media sponsors for the Caribbean Day of Giving mediathon Oct. 26 to raise money “to support displaced residents of the affected islands.”

Broadcasts of programs, interviews and music will inform the public of the relief situation in the Bahamas with help from government officials and representatives of international organizations.

Caribbean Day of Giving is organized by the Caribbean Diaspora Disaster Relief Coalition.

Monetary donations during the mediathon will go to the Caribbean Day of Giving charity partners — the Bahamian American Association Inc. in New York City, American Foundation of the University of the West Indies and the Sandals Foundation.

And the relief efforts will aid some of the agencies on the ground in the Bahamas, such as Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency, HeadKnowles Bahamas, Hands for Hunger and Samaritan’s Purse.

For more information, please visit website: www.caribbeandayofgiving.com.

* A joint initiative to allow city employees in New York to “donate a portion of their paychecks to hurricane relief efforts, as well as collect donations from the general public to support ongoing relief work,” was announced by First Lady Chirlane McCray and Public Advocate Jumaane Williams.

According to statement, “the funds will be managed through the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City [and] distributed to reputable relief organizations” working in the Bahamas.

“The Bahamas thanks you for this initiative and for the excellent work that you’re doing, because without your support, this tragedy could be greater,” said Lawrence (Larry) Cartwright, Bahamas consul general in New York.

“Many of our families have deep connections to the islands of the Caribbean — they are hurting, mourning the loss of loved ones and friends, and fearful of the future nature’s fury may bring,” said McCray.

“Through the strength of our partnerships and the generosity of the people of New York, we will help bring critical support to Bahamians impacted by Hurricane Dorian,” said Toya Williford, executive director of the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City.

* Last week, Gov. Cuomo announced that the State University of New York will offer reduced instate tuition for the 2019-20 academic year to students from the Bahamas who have been displaced by Hurricane Dorian.

And SUNY’s Board of Trustees encouraged the boards of trustees of its 30 community colleges and the statutory colleges at Cornell University and Alfred Ceramics to do the same.

“In New York, we know all too well about the life-shattering damage a hurricane and other extreme weather can leave behind,” Cuomo said. “We will stand with our brothers and sisters in the Caribbean at this difficult time and send much more than thoughts and prayers to the Bahamas.”

Visit www.suny.edu for information.

Angostura cocktail contest

Bartenders and mixologists in the Caribbean — who are normally hustling and bustling in their jobs — are getting really stirred up about the Angostura Global Cocktail Challenge.

The 10th annual Cocktail Challenge will take place Feb. 23 in Trinidad — held during Trinidad and Tobago’s 2020 carnival. But now is the time for participants from the region to get involved.

Deadline is Oct. 10 for entrants to submit written and video applications to be selected to compete in the Nov. 10 regional contest in Barbados. Only six people will be chosen.

The Challenge is open to bartenders from Anguilla, Antigua, Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Maarten, St. Martin, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Turks and Caicos and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The big Cocktail Challenge finale in Trinidad will be a a truly a global affair — the culmination of participants from North and South America, Europe and Asia vying for top honors.

The all-Caribbean winner will then compete in the global finale, to shake — or stir — it against international competitors vying for $10,000 as well as a two-year contract as the ANGOSTURA Global Brand Ambassador, showcasing ANGOSTURA bitters and rum products.

The Angostura company is known for its aromatic bitters and fine rums, produced at the only rum distillery in Trinidad.

Visit angosturaglobalcocktailchallenge.com and select the “How to Enter” tab for entry information, competition rules and guidelines.

85 years of service

The 85-year-old Manhattan-based Antigua and Barbuda Progressive Society received well-deserved honors last week when a City Council proclamation named Sept. 25 as “Antigua and Barbuda Progressive Society Day” in New York City and the group got U.S. House of Representatives recognition for its birthday.

Members and supporters gathered at the group’s Harlem headquarters Wednesday for an open house marking its founding more than four decades ago.

Mayor de Blasio signed the “Antigua and Barbuda Progressive Society Day” document, which noted the organization’s founding goals to aid immigrants and its service initiatives in “Harlem ad beyond.”

The anniversary recognition from Congress came from Rep. Adriano Espaillat (D-Manhattan). The congressional honor cited the longtime organization’s “steadfast service to our community” on it’s 85th birthday.

T&T PM rings in Nasdaq

Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Keith Rowley took time from his diplomatic duties at the United Nations General Assembly to take center stage at the Nasdaq MarketSite in Times Square — and ringing the stock market’s opening bell last Friday.

“This morning I participated in the Nasdaq bell-ringing ceremony,” Rowley tweeted on Friday. “I used the opportunity to promote Trinidad and Tobago to a global audience and to highlight our industrial sector, our culture and our people.”

According to the stock exchange, the prestigious opening and closing bell ceremonies “provide a platform for companies to generate meaningful brand exposure”

Nasdaq Market Technology executive Carlos Patino introduced Rowley, who was accompanied by Pennelope Beckles, Trinidad and Tobago’s permanent representative to the UN.

Haitian nurses’ gala

Working and caring for patients in the Greater New York area 24/7 and 365 days a year is quite a task, but members of the Haitian American Nurses Association manage to do that and more — holding community events, helping students and presenting an annual scholarship, fund-raising and awards gala.

HANA’s 2019 gala — at Leonard’s Palazzo, 555 Northern Blvd. in Great Neck, L.I., on Nov. 1 — is a big fund-raiser for the not-for-profit organization that helps pay for its participation in local community health fairs, the group’s tuition assistance program and its academic scholarship program for students in Greater New York and Haiti.

“The gala is our flagship event that enables us to do this and to recognize individuals/organizations that are making a difference in our communities” said HANA President Kelynne Edmond, adding that there are still opportunities for sponsors to get involved.

“With the support from sponsors last year, HANA was able to raise over $10,000 in scholarship funds for deserving nursing students. Our goal is to double the scholarship amounts in 2019. We cannot reach this benchmark without your generous support,” she said.

The New York State Nurses Association, Premier Heritage, High Volume Boutique, Junior Auto Repair, Haiti Premiere Classe, Progressive Community Center/Citi Health Home Care Services, BHRAGS Home Care, Beyond Focus TV, and Essentia Water are some of the past sponsors for the benefit.

“All sponsorship contributions are 100% tax-deductible,” said Edmond.

For information on the HANA gala, the group’s activities, scholarship applications and sponsorship opportunities, visit hanainc.org or send email to kedmond.hanagreaterny@gmail.com.

Harlem-Queens art show

The “Harlem Renaissance to Jamaica Renaissance” event — bringing a special edition of the traveling Harlem Fine Arts Show to Queens, will be held in Saturday at the Jamaica Performing Arts Center, 153-10 Jamaica Ave., from 7 p.m. to midnight.

Works in the traveling “African diasporic” art show will be on display starting at 10 a.m.

Under the theme, “Coming Home,” the organizers of the art show and sale will salute “Jamaica, Queens, icons” and present a special award to the Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning.

A portion of the proceeds will be donated to the Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning.

“Saturday Chic” is the dress code for the affair, which features food from the Hibiscus Restaurant and music from Art Cross of WBLS

Admission to the special evening event is $50 and includes all-day access. From 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., the general admission to the art show is $15, with reduced rates for seniors and students.

For information, visit hfas.org or call (800) 376-3860.

Dancehall’s Spragga is back

It has been close to a decade, but dancehall’s Spragga Benz has released his new album, “Chiliagon,” through Easy Star/Buttercuts/Red Square Productions.

On the long-anticipated album, Benz does not disappoint — “blending roots, riddim, drum and bass, garage, grime and hip hop.”

With the aid of top producers in the U.K., the album features Sean Paul, General Levy, Agent Sasco, Harry Shotta, Tanika and others.

“These are artists and producers I’ve worked with and admired as friends, as a fan, and as idols I looked up to. Dancehall is the foundation of so many genres; being surrounded by so much talent for ‘Chiliagon’ brings my joy of making music full circle,” says Benz.

For more on the album, visit easystar.com.

And at the Grammy Museum Experience Prudential Center on Thursday at 7:30 p.m., Benz will take part in a moderated conversation followed by a question-and-answer session and a brief performance. Tickets are $20 and available now at grammymuseumexp.org

http://www.msn.com

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Caribbean Sailing Week gets set to welcome regional race officials and sailors

The region’s top regatta managers, yacht club representatives, race officials and dinghy sailors are heading to English Harbour, Antigua next month to a new format event, Caribbean Sailing Week.
The combined conference, regatta and training session will bring together a forum of sailing race organisation and race management to the Caribbean islands and countries of central America – with some competitive dinghy racing thrown in for good measure.

Caribbean Sailing Week will aim to combine a conference whose agenda will address the continuing progression of increasing the participation, successes and inclusivity of home-grown sailors and events, together with the growth of attendance and reputation for excellent organisation of the region’s international regattas. As well as the conference, which will be preceded by a Race Management Clinic on 15-17 October, the Caribbean Dinghy Championships will take place at the same time.

The CSA Conference itself will open on 17 October and will run concurrently with the Caribbean Dinghy Championship. Sponsored by the fighters against the plastics in our oceans, Sailors for the Sea, the conference will embrace two days of discussion, presentations and strategising about regatta organisation, marketing, race management, measurement and sailing development.

Key speakers will include Robbie Ferron, resident of Cole Bay, St Maarten, and the founder of the original CSA Conference format. He plans to review the potential that regional players have in order to make significant changes to how yachting in the Eastern Caribbean functions. “I will be providing some historical background and analyses of the positives and negatives of where the events and local sailing find themselves in 2019,” he reports. Robbie is one of the Caribbean’s greatest drivers of today’s sailing scene in the region. He is the founder of St Maarten Yacht Club, and the St Maarten Heineken Regatta.

Elizabeth Jordan of Antigua is founder and President of the National Sailing Academy Antigua which offers the opportunity for Antiguan school children to learn sailing free of charge. Explaining how she will be presenting the successes of the Academy and providing inspiration to others she says “We are approaching the end of year 10 and have now trained several hundred young people to sail as well as providing further training to give them the qualifications to look for careers in the sailing/yachting industry.”

From Puerto Rico, another longstanding contributor to the success of the Caribbean region’s sailing calendar is Jaime Torres. Now Race Manager of Antigua Sailing Week (ASW), he comments “I want to contribute to making ASW and every other Caribbean sailing event as great as it can be.”

Jaime was use the CSA Conference to outline his aims to continue to maintain and grow Antigua Sailing Week’s status by anticipating and meeting the needs of the racers, both owners and crews. “I would love to see the event grow in every racing class: owner driven cruiser/racers and grand prix boats, with charter fleet boats bringing in more people to sample the amazing combination of hard core racing followed by wonderful shore side activity.”

One of the best-known sailing legends of the Caribbean Region, Peter Holmberg, will also be delivering a presentation on the overview of global racing events, although he will not be there himself as he is away in Europe at a grand prix event. The winning America’s Cup sailor and multiple Olympic medallist comments “The greatest aspect of the CSA organization is how effective we are at bringing all the players of the region together to share information, cooperate, and unite for the benefit of the entire Caribbean. We need to keep this feature prominent and strong.”

Paige Myatt from US-based Sailors of the Sea, the world’s only ocean conservation organization that engages, educates and activates the sailing and boating community toward restoring ocean health, will help attendees examine the way towards clean green regattas. Meanwhile another stalwart of the race management structure, Tim Cross, will present his ‘big plan’ to improve the standards and capabilities of the island-wide network of sailing coaches and trainers.

Other key presenters from around the islands will also be adding their vital input to the agenda.

While the conference is under way, the Caribbean Dinghy Championship, sponsored by Seahawk Premier Yacht Finishes, will be take place on the water right next to the venue at Antigua Yacht Club. Sailors from Caribbean Sailing Association (CSA) member clubs around the region will compete in the three-day series in a selection of dinghy classes for all ages, vying for the coveted Nations Cup. Trophies will abound for the classes, including women’s, and physically-challenged divisions, reflecting the equality and inclusivity of the event.

Entries have already been received from Trinidad, St Maarten, St Kitts & Nevis and Barbados with many others expected to follow in the next couple of weeks. A unique all-inclusive package is on offer to the participants, making the event even more attractive, including the provision of a boat, airport transfers and all meals.

Details and updates of the event can be found at

caribbeansailingweek.com.

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