NEWS
Yoshabell Foundation helps special needs families
Thirty bags of personal care supplies have been distributed to the attendees of the Tobago Technical Vocational Centre for Persons with Disabilities, commonly referred to as the Tech Voc Centre in Bon Accord, by Yoshabell Foundation. The presentation was done by Yoshabell Foundation’s president and founder Maria Nelson-Santana. She said, “At Yoshabell’s Foundation, we are giving back to these young adults. We have been doing this for the past three years, so every year we come back here and it’s indeed a pleasure. We give out personal care suppliers and clothing.” Nelson-Santana said the foundation hosts an annual bingo fund-raising event in the month of October. Read more here
100 new mental cases at Sando hospital every month
Every month more than a hundred new people are being admitted to the mental health clinic of the San Fernando General Hospital, many of whom are children. This startling revelation was made by the chief executive officer of the Southwest Regional Health Authority Keith McDonald during the launch of a mental awareness seminar held at the Carnegie Free Library in San Fernando on Monday. McDonald said depression and other mental health disorders are no longer adult ailments but are affecting scores of children across the country. Read more here
POLITICS
Culture Minister urges girls to get into politics
Minister of Community Development, Culture and the Arts Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly is encouraging girls to consider politics as a way of being patriotic and serving their country. At the DigiGirlz Day event at the Microsoft office in St James on Saturday, she said patriots showed their love for their country by seeking to serve and improve it. She acknowledged that being an MP or a politician was not easy because it was a lot of work and, because politicians performed at a national level, it opened an individual up to criticism without an opportunity to explain or defend themselves. But she told the audience, they should not close themselves off to a life of public service because it was an important job that allowed them to make policies. Gadsby-Dolly said the policymakers ran the country and TT needed good, strong, educated, committed leaders. Read more here
PM: DPP will decide on A&V Drilling case
The same Director of Public Prosecutions who “conducted his business” the way he did last week - with two UNC members- and also did it again yesterday is the same DPP who has information concerning the A&V Drilling alleged “fake oil” issue. That was Prime Minister Keith Rowley’s response to the Opposition in Parliament yesterday when he was grilled about why there was no forensic audit into the A&V Drilling/oil issue. The matter was broken by the Opposition in 2017. Internal audit claims had emerged that A&V Drilling, received millions of dollars from Petrotrin but failed to supply the volume of oil promised. Rowley had acknowledged the company’s owner was his friend. Read more here
BUSINESS
TSTT wage bill declining
Majority State-owned telecommunications provider TSTT says its wage bill has been reduced from over 30 per cent of revenue to 20 per cent of revenue, as a result of last year’s job cuts. “We now have a restructured organisation designed into four clear lines of business, with end-to-end responsibility for accountability and profitability,” TSTT chairman Robert Mayers told the Joint Select Committee of Parliament on State Enterprises yesterday. Read more here
REGIONAL
Pain Relief - Gov’t To Pump Millions Into Outsourcing Surgeries, Tests To Reduce Hospital Wait Times
The Government plans to roll out a multimillion-dollar spend to clear the backlog of public-sector patients languishing from the wait for diagnostic tests and non-emergency surgeries by outsourcing healthcare to private practitioners, free of charge to the public. Lengthy wait times for surgery have been the bane of Jamaica’s public health system, with patients sometimes waiting months – or even years – for operations that rank low in priority compared to crisis cases involving injuries caused by gun violence, heart attacks, and other life-threatening illnesses. Public hospitals are often under-resourced, and even when they are outfitted with equipment, inadequate maintenance schedules and financing cause them to fall into disrepair, exacerbating delays and causing mass cancellations. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Turkey's Erdogan defends Istanbul election re-run amid protests
US trade officials say Trump's tariff threat is real
The top US trade negotiator said Monday that the Trump administration will be moving forward on President Donald Trump's threat to escalate tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods effective Friday. Speaking to reporters in Washington, US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said China reneged on previous agreements over the weekend, derailing months of progress toward a detailed trade agreement between the world's two largest economies. As of Friday, penalties on $200 billion of Chinese goods will be lifted to 25% from 10%, as Trump tweeted on Sunday. Read more here
7th May 2019