business@tribunemedia.net
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2019
$4.15
LESLIE MILLER
Ex-BEC chair: ‘Have a heart’ for Out Islands By NATARIO MCKENZIE
Tribune Business Reporter
nmckenzie@tribunemedia.net A FORMER Bahamas Electricity Corporation (BEC) chairman yesterday slammed plans for a mass disconnection of delinquent Family Island customers, and urged: “Have a heart”. Leslie Miller, the outspoken former MP and Cabinet minister, hit out against Bahamas Power & Light’s (BPL) strategy to begin cutting off nonpayers in remote islands by mid-March, and called on the state-owned utility to “have some compassion”. Challenging how BPL is being run, Mr Miller queried why BPL’s fuel charge did not reflect the recent significant drop in global
SEE PAGE 4
Dolphin injury cover-up costs Atlantis worker By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net FAILING to record a bad “dolphin encounter”, and then trying to cover it up, cost an Atlantis middle manager his job - with the resort’s decision backed by two Bahamian courts. The Court of Appeal, in a unanimous verdict this week, rejected Eden Butler’s attempt to overturn an earlier rejection of his unfair/wrongful dismissal claim on the basis that it saw no reason to interfere with the Supreme Court’s finding that the episode represented “a fundamental breach” of his employment contract.
SEE PAGE 6
$4.20
$4.19
BTC ‘bottoming out’ as mobile losses cut 2/3 By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
T
HE Bahamas Telecommunications Company (BTC) last night showed signs of “bottoming out” in its battle with Aliv after its mobile subscriber loss rate was cut by twothirds in late 2018. Liberty Latin America (LiLAC), its ultimate parent, unveiled 2018 full-year and final quarter results showing that BTC lost just 4,000 mobile customers during the three months to end-December - a major reduction compared to previous quarters. While BTC’s mobile customer base still shrank to
• Loses just 4,000 subscribers in Q4 • ‘Value propositions’ to spark upturn • But still lost 1,100 fixed-line clients
BTC HEADQUARTERS 224,300 subscribers at yearend, the 2018 fourth quarter reduction stood up favourably against the 10,400 and 12,400 customers that it
lost in the second and third quarters, respectively. The figures showed that BTC’s subscriber loss rate, known as “attrition”, fell
GOVERNANCE reformers yesterday warned Bahamians that their tolerance of low-level graft creates a breeding ground for multimillion dollar corruption which ultimately hurts them. Matt Aubry, the Organisation for Responsible Governance’s (ORG) executive director, told Tribune Business that corruption and its related costs “hits the poorest” in Bahamian society hardest “in a variety of ways” - whether it be through increased taxes or low-quality public services. Speaking as ORG prepares to partner with government, non-profit and other civil society groups on the launch of its National Integrity Campaign “in the next couple of weeks”, Mr Aubry said it was vital that The Bahamas stop “repeating the same mistakes” in trying to fight corruption. ORG last week renewed
its calls for the government to bring both the Integrity Commission and Ombudsman Bills to Parliament in the wake of the controversy surrounding the handling of recent politically-related corruption cases - one of which had resulted in former Public Hospitals Authority chairman, Frank Smith, being completely cleared of all accusations and having
“no case” to answer. Mr Aubry, though, said the passage of such legislation was only “the first step”, adding that it was vital for the Bahamian people to push for their enforcement otherwise essential changes in culture and behaviour will not happen. “It’s really to raise the level of discussion around the issue of integrity,” he
Hotels eliminate ‘cannibalisation’ fears in 2018 By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
told Tribune Business of the ORG-led campaign, “and our culture of corruption, and realise we can do something as individuals to address this issue and reduce the incidences and cost of corruption by choosing to incorporate these ideas into our efforts and every day lives.”
THE Bahamian hotel industry’s strong 2018 performance has eliminated “genuine fears” that Baha Mar’s full opening would “cannibalise” the market, a Cabinet minister argued yesterday. Dionisio D’Aguilar, pictured, minister of tourism and aviation, told Tribune Business that the acrossthe-board improvements in revenue and occupancy indicators showed that concerns Baha Mar would split the high-end visitor market with Atlantis had proven to be unfounded. He argued that this development was “more important” to the hotel and tourism industry’s future prospects than last year’s increase in stopover visitor numbers and spending, since it indicated The Bahamas’ two mega resort casinos could co-exist without sparking a “race to the bottom” on room rates in a bid to seize market share. With the Nassau/Paradise Island hotel industry figures backing the “build
SEE PAGE 5
SEE PAGE 5
by more than two-thirds quarter-over-quarter during the final period of 2018, with LiLAC attributing the improvement to “new value propositions” that will better enable the carrier to withstand Aliv’s competitive threat. BTC’s fourth quarter performance also backs recent optimism from its chief executive, Garfield “Garry” Sinclair, who told Tribune Business last month that
SEE PAGE 4
Bahamians told: Corruption war begins with you By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
$4.24