03212017 business

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TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 2017

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Atlantis ‘very concerned’ Family Guardian on labour reforms impact in near-$6m ‘hit’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

Atlantis last night said it was “extremely concerned” over the Government’s proposed labour law reforms, saying they represented “an intrusion” into companies being able to run their businesses. Ed Fields, the resort’s senior vice-president of public affairs, told Tribune Business that the increased costs and bureaucracy associated with the amendments to the Employment and Industrial Relations Act threatened to undermine Atlantis’s competitive standing against rival destination resorts. “Obviously, we are extremely concerned,” he

from Prime slash

Largest employer says laws akin to ‘intrusion’

By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

Private sector to meet PM on concerns today Hotel chief fears ‘immediate, irreversible’ impact said last night. “Our concern is in the context of the increasing pressures in doing business in a very, very competitive world. “We’re going to have to sit with government and voice our concerns, but it would certainly be irresponsible

The Atlantis Hotel.

for us not to say the level of concern we have with this additional pressure.” Mr Fields added that some changes, such as the requirement for employ-

ers to notify the Minister of Labour if they planned to make just one worker redundant, seemed like unreasonable, unwarranted See pg b4

US wins $13.9m ‘Ninety’ Minister: 2/3 redundancy assets confiscate appeal increase brings Bahamas By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net The Privy Council yesterday paved the way for a battle over assets allegedly belonging to convicted drug trafficker, Samuel ‘Ninety’ Knowles, after it ruled that the US government’s $13.9 million confiscation order against him can be registered in the Bahamas. The UK court, the highest in the Bahamian judicial system, overturned a previous Court of Appeal verdict that found the confiscation order could not be registered under the Proceeds of Crime Act because there was no written request from the US Attorney General to do so. The Court of Appeal also ruled that Mr Knowles’ relatives, who claimed ownership of the assets ‘frozen’ on behalf of the US authorities since 2001, should have been notified of the confiscation order because it affected their interests. This, too, was rejected by the Privy Council, which found that the ‘confiscation order’ was separate from efforts to enforce it, and that as a result it only affected Mr Knowles. The ruling now enables the US government to seek forfeiture of Bahamasbased assets that it claims belong to Mr Knowles, paving the way for a new legal battle with his family, who allege they belong to it and

Privy Council: Order can be registered in Bahamas Ruling paves way for battle with Knowles’s family Claim property, cars theirs and bought legitimate were obtained via legitimate means. The Privy Council said an “historic feature” of the case was the failure to determine the ownership of the assets, which have been subject to a ‘freeze’ order made on the US government’s behalf almost 16 years ago. “The assets frozen included some dozen or so different parcels of real property, several of them condominium units, approximately nine bank accounts, and the assets of a car rental business at the [Lynden Pindling International] airport which is called A1 Car Rentals Ltd,” the Privy Council judgment said. “It has always been the claim of the US prosecutors that the assets restrained were in reality in the beneficial ownership of the defendant, albeit carefully acquired in the name of his See pg b4

‘in line’ with Caribbean By NATARIO McKENZIE

Tribune Business Reporter

nmckenzie@tribunemedia.net

The Minister of Labour yesterday argued that employer concerns over the proposed two-thirds increase in the redundancy pay ‘cap’ were misplaced, arguing that it would bring the Bahamas into line with the rest of the Caribbean. Shane Gibson said the Government was not “reinventing the wheel” in its controversial labour reforms, and said regional comparisons suggest “something has to be wrong” with the current 12year cap. Addressing the House of Assembly during the See pg b4

Gibson: 33 years in Barbados, no cap in Antigua

Minister of Labour and National Insurance Shane Gibson

Family Guardian yesterday said it took a near-$6 million hit at year-end 2016 as a result of the Prime interest rate reduction, which impacted “more than 70 per cent” of its investment assets. Lyrone Burrows, the BISX-listed life and health insurer’s president, told Tribune Business it had met its 2016 profit targets, despite having to increase reserves to compensate for the Central Bank’s pre-Christmas move to cut interest rates by 50 basis points. Although the rate cut took effect early this year, Mr Burrows said its impact had to be factored into Family Guardian’s 2016 year-end financials, given that policyholder reserves have to be calculated on a

Rate cut impacted ‘over 70% of investment assets’ BISX-listed insurer raises reserves, ‘defers’ projects ‘In expansion mode’ on general insurance agency “forward looking” basis. “We were significantly impacted by the change in the Prime rate,” Mr Burrows explained. “This would have been taken into consideration for determining the reserves from 2016, as they are forward looking. “We had to take on additional reserves because of the falling interest rate environment. In excess of 70 See pg b5

GB Power demand 10% ‘below normal’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

Demand for Grand Bahama Power Company’s (GBPC) electricity is down 10 per cent below normal levels, with its majority shareholder not anticipating a recovery before 2018. Canadian utility giant Emera, which owns a majority 80.4 per cent equity interest in Grand Bahama Power, warned in its 2016 full-year results announcement that lower energy demand in the Bahamas would act as a drag on its wider Caribbean earnings

Matthew blamed for cutting utility’s load until 2018 Utility to turn to consumers if costs not recovered within five years in 2017. Attributing the reduced energy demand to Hurricane Matthew’s aftermath, Emera said: “Post hurricane load is down approximately 10 per cent as compared to See pg b5


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