MONDAY McCombo Big Mac $5.00
i’m lovin’ it!
HIGH 90ºF LOW 79ºF
The Tribune Established 1903
24/7 BREAKING NEWS ON TRIBUNE242.COM
Biggest And Best!
VOLUME:117 No.153, JULY 6TH, 2020
HO US E & 12 THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1
SPORT: GARDINER SMASHES BROWN’S NAT RECORD
PAGES
SMOKESCREEN Companies accused of exploiting COVID to target specific staff By LEANDRA ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter lrolle@tribunemedia.net LABOUR Director John Pinder said while he believes most companies have had to lay off workers due to decreased business from the COVID-19 pandemic, he thinks there are some who have been using the pandemic as an excuse to get rid of certain employees. “I think there are one or two cases where there may have been employees who were terminated based on the fact that ‘I can right size now or downsize or get rid of persons I didn’t want during this time’,” he told The Tribune yesterday. “And again, they have to comply with the Employment Act as it relates to severance pay where they have separation packages.
I believe that is happening in one or two areas but for the most part, I have to say because of local business, employers are forced to make some decisions.” Mr Pinder said this is why he encourages Bahamian workers to put their best foot forward every day. “I try to encourage Bahamian workers to do the best you can to make it very difficult for an employer to make that decision on you,” he said. “We live in a global village now so we have to make sure that we’re producing at the highest expectation possible.” His comments come as mega resorts and other tourism businesses continue their process of terminating workers given the economic fall-out brought on by the pandemic.
DOCTORS Hospital has revealed the termination of 43 workers after aggressive cost-cutting measures proved insufficient to offset “diminished patient activity”. The healthcare provider warned it was “navigating some very blunt fiscal realities” created by the COVID-19 pandemic as it confirmed the 8 percent reduction of its 535-strong
FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
AID SALES UP 20% BUT DROP-OFF IMMINENT
SEE PAGE THREE
full-time workforce. The job cuts come despite Doctors Hospital reducing non-patient care operating expenses by “as much as 46 percent”, and the voluntary 25 percent salary reduction taken by senior management, as it seeks to adjust to the post-COVID-19 reality. “We are delicately navigating some very blunt fiscal realities brought on by COVID19,” said Dennis Deveaux, Doctors Hospital’s chief financial officer, in a statement.
FIDELITY’S WARNING ON VISITS TO THE US
BAHAMIAN workers were yesterday warned they could find themselves taking unpaid leave if they fail to make “wise” vacation decisions amid the COVID-19 threat. Gowon Bowe, Fidelity Bank (Bahamas) chief financial officer, said the bank’s employees will, in the first instance, be treated as having taken additional vacation should they have to undergo a 14-day quarantine upon their return. And, should they have insufficient vacation time to cover this period or it be exhausted, he explained that it will be treated as “unpaid leave” - meaning the employee will suffer a reduction in their takehome pay and earnings.
DOCTORS HOSPITAL CUTS BACK 43 JOBS By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
HOME
RIPPED APART
THE RBDF is still searching for a woman missing from an American vessel which was badly damaged after it ran aground near South Bimini. The incident last week left one man dead and two others injured. Full report - Page 7
MEXICAN HIRINGS ‘A SLAP IN THE FACE’ By LEANDRA ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter lrolle@tribunemedia.net
IMMIGRATION Minister Elsworth Johnson has defended the government’s decision to grant over 100 work permits to Mexican construction workers who entered the country last week to work at the Baker’s Bay Golf & Ocean Club resort in Abaco. Their arrival comes at a time when thousands
MINISTER: Elsworth Johnson of Bahamian workers are being laid off due to the economic uncertainty brought on by the COVID-19 crisis.
Branding the move as “a slap in the face” to qualified Bahamians who are in need of jobs, Abaco resident Cay Mills said many on the storm-impacted island are “highly” upset about the situation. “Everybody is so upset about it here,” he told The Tribune yesterday. “The question is, could it have happened in Mexico? Would they have accepted Bahamians?” SEE PAGE THREE
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
A MAJOR Bahamian retailer says its 20 percent “better than normal” sales performance has given it sufficient optimism to move ahead with an $8.2m investment. However Jason Watson, Automotive Industrial Distributors (AID) president, told Tribune Business that plans for constructing new stores at the company’s Blue Hill Road location and in Abaco could “change very quickly” amid expectations that current business volumes could drop-off as early as this month. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
INSIGHT Childhood traumas which lead to violence SEE PAGE TEN