business@tribunemedia.net
FRIDAY, JULY 19, 2019
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Cable: $442m debt slash top ‘priority’
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
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ABLE Bahamas’ chief executive yesterday pledged that slashing the company’s $442m debt and “reinstating” shareholder dividends are among the top priorities in its new financial year. Franklyn Butler, in an interview with Tribune Business, said the BISX-listed communications provider was “doing everything to prioritise” investor needs amid growing shareholder disquiet over heavy losses
• And reinstating shareholder dividends • CEO: Investors ‘out of sync’ on growth phase • Says $10m-$15m network investment likely
FRANKLYN BUTLER
sustained as a result of its Aliv and Florida expansions. The Cable Bahamas chief, though, argued it was “not uncommon to be out of sync with your shareholders” during such a growth phase especially given the emphasis most Bahamian investors place on receiving an annual dividend as the measure by which they judge a company’s performance.
Dividend payments have been suspended for several years to conserve capital for investing in the Bahamian mobile and Summit broadband roll-outs, and Mr Butler - while voicing hope that they might be resumed “in fairly short order” - said he was unable “to commit to a timeline” for doing so.
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Aliv calls on BTC: ‘work with us for good of Bahamas’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net ALIV yesterday called for greater co-operation from the Bahamas Telecommunications Company (BTC) in developing “a more resilient interconnection regime” following several recent service disruptions that impacted both carriers’ clients. Damian Blackburn, Aliv’s top executive, told Tribune Business that “the Bahamian people have the right to expect” that calls, texts and other forms of communication will enjoy an interruption-free two-way flow between the mobile rivals. Speaking after communications between Aliv and BTC customers were disrupted at least three times in recent months, Mr Blackburn said his company
• Calls for ‘more resilient connectivity regime’ • Bahamians ‘expect’ more than disruption • ‘Not one’ site affected by BPL outages
DAMIAN BLACKBURN had “consistently” sought greater co-operation from BTC to “make the way calls are handed over between the networks more resilient”. “We have a policy in Aliv that, whenever there’s a service interruption or outage,
Both sides claim victory in Briland project battle By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net BOTH sides in the dispute over a controversial Harbour Island project were yesterday claiming victory in the first battles of a brewing legal war over efforts to overturn its permits and approvals. Benjamin Simmons, the Harbour Island hotelier who is one of two parties behind the Judicial Review action seeking to halt the Briland Residences & Marina development, told Tribune Business that the project’s developer had
“skipped over” several developments in claiming victory in their first legal skirmish. A principal behind the second Judicial Review sponsor, Briland Island Responsible Development, Mr Simmons said Justice Diane Stewart had allowed them to amend their initial filings to enter “environmental evidence” provided by their consultants, Turrell, Hall & Associates. And he argued that Michael Wiener and his 4M Harbour Island entity were “in an impossible position”
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Canadian supplier disowns claims against Renew chief By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net A CANADIAN company has disowned claims levelled by an ex-Bahamas-based consultant against the chief executive of the former New Providence landfill manager. Machinex, which manufactured and supplied the materials recycling facility still sitting at the landfill, told Tribune Business it had never enjoyed anything other than a cordial and truthful relationship with Renew Bahamas head, Michael Cox. The company disassociated itself from allegations made against Mr
Cox by JP Michielsen, the former Stellar Waste to energy executive, adding that his remarks in a recent report did not represent Machinex’s position and that he was not authorised to speak on its behalf. “At the time the article was published, Mr Michielsen was not authorised to speak on behalf of Machinex,” the Canadian firm said in its statement to this newspaper. “Last year, Mr Michielsen was mandated to help us understand the local market, since we were not a local company. His mandate ended in March
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there is a quick move to notify customers and explain the problem,” he told this newspaper. “There have been some fairly high profile disruptions in Aliv customers trying to call BTC customers, and we obviously have no control whatsoever over BTC’s network.” Garfield “Garry” Sinclair, BTC’s chief executive, issued an apology over the last outage that occurred over the weekend of June 29-30, which impacted both mobile and fixed-line communications customers. The police control room and emergency calls were among the facilities said to have been negatively
impacted by “a critical fault” on BTC’s transmission ring between New Providence and Grand Bahama, which took the better part of two days to correct, and also interrupted calls and messages to Aliv customers and vice versa. Mr Sinclair’s statement conceded that there were “intermittent issues with BTC mobile voice services, as customers were unable to reach some off-net destinations”, and his Aliv counterpart yesterday suggested it was time for the two carriers to work together to make their interconnection
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Patron tax to cover just 45% of gaming By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net JUST 45 percent of web shop gaming activities will attract the new patron “winnings” tax, a Cabinet minister yesterday revealing that online casino spins will remain untouched “for now”. Dionisio D’Aguilar, minister of tourism and aviation, told the House of Assembly that the government had decided to focus this levy solely on lottery/numbers operations because it was too “complicated” to calculate the winnings from online casino spinning. Leading debate on the Gaming Amendment Bill 2019 as the minister responsible for the industry, Mr D’Aguilar said this “small tax on winnings” was projected to yield between $10m-$15m annually for the Public Treasury and help take the government closer to the $50m total web shop revenue target it had envisioned under the initial tax structure for the industry. The new winnings tax, due to take effect when changes to the Gaming House Operator Regulations are implemented at the House of Assembly’s next sitting on Wednesday coming, will see five percent paid on winnings up to $1,000 and 7.5 percent on anything greater than $1,000. Mr D’Aguilar yesterday indicated that Bahamian gamblers had got off relatively lightly, as the comparable winnings tax rates in Jamaica and Barbados are 15 percent and 20 percent, respectively. In the US, he added that the federal tax rate was 25 percent, with state and local taxes on top of that. “The government wishes to introduce a small tax on winnings from playing numbers only, which I already
DIONISIO D’AGUILAR have established only makes up 45 percent of the domestic gaming market - less than half - and leave any winnings from online casino operations untaxed for now,” he told the House of Assembly. And, with the operator tax structure also set to be codified with the new regulations, Mr D’Aguilar warned the four web shop hold-outs - Asure Win, the Island Game, Paradise Game and FML - that they now needed to pay taxes owed or face the loss of their licences when they next come up for renewal. Expressing optimism that there would be no need for such action, the minister added: “With the introduction of greater enforcement powers to the Gaming Board in this Bill, I warn those non-compliant operators that, in order to continue to operate in the gaming industry of the Bahamas, they will have to catch up on their outstanding taxes or lose their license to operate. “A number of the smaller houses have assured me that, with the passage of this new legislation and accompanying amendments to the regulations, they have every intention of catching up, and so, I am optimistic of a positive outcome.
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