04012020 NEWS AND SPORT

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VOLUME:117 No.91, APRIL 1ST, 2020

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17,000: HELP US

...And that doesn’t include NIB claims from hotel workers By LEANDRA ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter lrolle@tribunemedia.net THE National Insurance Board has received around 17,000 applications for unemployment benefits due to the coronavirus pandemic, Public Service and National Insurance Minister Brensil Rolle said yesterday. Noting officials are working hard to expedite the claims, Mr Rolle said the applications submitted to NIB do not include those of hotel workers. This, he said, is because NIB officials are engaged in discussions with hotel personnel to assist with faster payments for affected workers. He said: “As of (Monday), approximately 17,000 applications have

SEE PAGE EIGHT

INSURERS’ ANGER AT PREMIUMS ‘HOLIDAY’

come before the NIB board to be processed. That excludes the major hotels because we are negotiating with them separately. “…We are working with the hotels so that arrangements will be made to pay off their staff who are unemployed in a quicker way. Small businesses have been coming to us and we hope to quickly process their applications.” He continued: “You know we are working on two fronts. “Firstly, we’re dealing with those persons who are seeking unemployment assistance who’ve been laid off generally and secondly. . . we’ve become the government vehicle for dealing with self-employed individuals in the touristic industry.

By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

BAHAMIAN life and health insurers were yesterday said to be “up in arms” after the government ordered them to continue paying multi-million dollar claims without receiving any income in return. Multiple industry sources described this aspect of the Minnis administration’s Emergency Powers Order as “absurd”.

SEE PAGE THREE

STOPOVER LOSSES COULD COST $2.7BN By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

THE Bahamas stands to lose $2.7bn in tourism revenues if the COVID-19 pandemic shuts down stopover visitors for the rest of 2020, Royal Bank’s former top Caribbean economist is warning. Marla Dukharan revealed this nation stands to lose up to 83 percent of its high-yielding land-based tourists if the global crisis lasts through year-end in a “worst case” scenario.

Should that play out, her research suggests The Bahamas’ annual revenue earnings from stopover visitors will plummet to $548m from $3.244bn in 2019. She said the “best case” and “base case” scenarios for The Bahamas were a 60 percent and 80 percent drop in annual stopover visitor numbers, respectively, the latter of which mirrored the Ministry of Finance’s initial estimates albeit for a four-month period.

FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

ALICIA WALLACE WE MUST ALL CHOOSE TO PLAY BY RULES

FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

DID VIRUS TAKE KIM? HEALTH officials are waiting for test results to determine whether Kim Johnson-Rolle, above, a 57-year-old woman from Bimini who died on Monday night after an emergency medical flight to Nassau, was suffering from COVID-19. Full report - Page 3

LICENCE MISERY FOR MOTORISTS By EARYEL BOWLEG ebowleg@tribunemedia.net MOTORISTS queued in long lines for hours at the Department of Road Traffic’s National Stadium office to licence their vehicles yesterday. Cars snaked around the stadium as motorists sat waiting for examinations on cars where the licence had expired at the end of the months. Once through the

THE QUEUE of cars yesterday vehicle exam drivers then had to endure a long wait to complete the admin process

within the licencing centre. People waited six feet apart as the department exercised social distancing, allowing only a limited number of people to pass the gate and into the building. Stephan Major told The Tribune “it’s been pretty rough” trying to complete the process, as he waited about three hours to do so. “This is out of control,” he said. “Well actually we

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

SEE PAGE SEVEN

NATIONAL EXAMS WILL BE MOVED By LEANDRA ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter lrolle@tribunemedia.net

WITH schools not expected to re-open until later this month due to COVID-19 fears, Education Minister Jeff Lloyd said yesterday “there’s no question” the government will have to postpone national examinations. SEE PAGE FOUR

TECHNOLOGY

THE MAN WHO MAKES ZOOM MEETINGS WORK

SEE PAGE NINE


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