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The Tribune
Volume:115 No.151, JUNE 29TH, 2018
Established 1903
Weekend
I1HURRICANE
THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1 The Tribune Established
1903
HURRIC GUIDE 2ANE 018 Being Bound To
Swear To The
BE SAFE FROM THE STORM - YOUR HURRICANE GUIDE INSIDE TODAY
BPL: We’ll do our best this summer
Inside
Dogmas Of No
Master
FROM MINISTRY POST TO NEW CONSULTANCY FOR ROBINSON
Preparation Tips Hurricanes of 2018 Fact Files Wind Scales Safety Tips Emergency Information
TURNING
Enough power - but no promise over aging equipment By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net BAHAMAS Power & Light has more than enough generation capacity to ensure Bahamians have a summer free of load shedding, but officials cannot guarantee the utility provider’s aging equipment will hold up all the way through the demanding season. During a press conference yesterday, BPL CEO Whitney Heastie told reporters the company is doing its best with a
UP THE
HEAT
non-ideal situation. “We have aging equipment,” he said. “I think everybody knows Shell North America has been awarded the consortium lead for the gas to power and we’re working really diligently until the new generation, which is a part of that gas to power equation, gets on the ground and we’re doing everything with the assets we have to make sure we carry them through the peak load of the summer.” SEE PAGE SIX
THE reported reclassification of foreign labourers at The Pointe has been condemned as “disingenuous” by Bahamas Contractors Association President Leonard Sands. Mr Sands, a one-time candidate for the governing Free National Movement, yesterday said he had no intentions of “picking a fight” over the issue, but implored his former political contemporaries “to do right by the people” and
ensure more Bahamians are employed at the site. “If you are saying workers at The Pointe are now laying blocks and doing finish work, there is no way you can say Bahamians aren’t skilled in those fields,” he said. “You are being disingenuous when you say that these persons are doing work Bahamians are known to do, all while hiding behind the argument that (foreign labourers) were being brought in to do tasks our people can’t.” SEE PAGE SIX
By MORGAN ADDERLEY Tribune Staff Reporter madderley@tribunemedia.net LESS than ten days after being fired by Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis from his post as parliamentary secretary in the Ministry of Tourism and Aviation, Bain and Grants Town MP Travis Robinson has launched his own tourism consultancy business. The company’s name is Consult Bahamas Limited, and Mr Robinson described himself as president, CEO, and chief tourism consultant in a post to Facebook on Wednesday afternoon. Mr Robinson provided more information on the company during a press conference he held yesterday to launch a $100,000 roof repair initiative to help 200 households in his constituency. When asked why he chose consultancy as a field, Mr Robinson referred to his academic background in tourism management and his former government position. SEE PAGE SEVEN
GIRL TOURISTS ASSAULTED ON HARBOUR ISLAND
CONTRACTOR: BAHAMIANS COULD DO POINTE WORK By RICARDO WELLS Tribune Staff Reporter rwells@tribunemedia.net
Evacuation plan Storm Shelters Pet Safety After the Storm Checklist Predictions Hurricane Stories
By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net
THE JUNKANOO Summer Festival was launched in Pompey Square last night. The event - with music by DJ Tank, Soulful Groovers, Blaudy and Bluetooth Band and a Junkanoo rushout - kicks off a summer of events at Arawak Cay. See page two for more pictures. Photos: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff
US TRAFFICKING REPORT WARNS OF ‘CORRUPTION IN IMMIGRATION’ By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net THE US State Department has said credible allegations of corruption in the Immigration Department has made potential victims of human trafficking vulnerable in The Bahamas. In its latest human
trafficking report, the United States also says migrants are vulnerable here to “rapid arrest and summary deportation” by the Royal Bahamas Defense Force without “proper trafficking screening”. The Bahamas has nonetheless maintained its tier one placement in the
report, indicating the country continues to be one of few in the region that is fully compliant with minimum standards of the US Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000. “The government increased law enforcement efforts. The Trafficking in SEE PAGE SEVEN
QUALITY PRODUCTS COUNT IN A HURRICANE! WE STOCK...
ALSO AN INCREDIBLE SELECTION OF POWER TOOLS BY... • Dewalt, Makita, Milwaukee, Porter Cable, Hitachi, Skill, Bosch, Stanley Bostitch and Black & Decker.
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
POLICE are investigating reports that indecent assault was committed against two juvenile female tourists on Harbour Island yesterday. Sometime around midnight and 2am, the girls were on a beach when they were allegedly indecently assaulted by two Bahamian men, police said in a statement. The men, residents of the island, were taken into custody. Police declined yesterday to elaborate on the incident, telling The Tribune charges of rape, unlawful sexual intercourse or indecent assault could result from their investigations. SEE PAGE SIX art books film fashion
music gardening culture
Weekend
Friday, June 29, 2018
puzzles food history ROCK THE BAHAMAS Page 11
Discover your roots
DNA Project opens wind ow to the past pages 4 &
5
WEEKEND:
TRACING THE DNA OF BAHAMIANS
SEE PAGE EIGHT