09252020 NEWS AND BUSINESS

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The Tribune

Volume:117 No.209, SEPTEMBER 25TH, 2020

Established 1903

Weekend

DIANE PHILLIPS: DON’T BE AFRAID - MOMS MATTER TOO

‘I’m not talking to her’

EDUCATION Minister Jeff Lloyd

THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1

Weekend

Friday, September 25, 2020 photography food garden ing culture history puzzles animals

Education Minister and union boss go to war

By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Senior Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net EDUCATION Minister Jeff Lloyd said his ministry will not attend

meetings with Bahamas Union of Teachers President Belinda Wilson or view her as a credible representative of teachers unless she apologises for her conduct and stops

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Comic book hero

Young artist seeks to be an

‘Apologise? No chance’

SINGER BATTLES BACK

inspiration

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BAHAMAS Union of Teachers president Belinda Wilson behaving in a “disrespectful and insulting” manner. He also claimed she has cursed at him in Whats App messages. SEE PAGE FIVE

‘FIRMS HAVEN’T GOT MONEY McALPINE STAYS ON FENCE FOR SEVERANCE PAYMENTS’ OVER ISSUE OF ALLEGIANCE By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Senior Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net LABOUR Director John Pinder said most employers do not have sufficient revenue to give severance packages to their employees if the government declines to extend its unemployment benefits programme.

The social assistance programme expires at the end of this month - as does the grace period in which employers can refrain from paying their employees and avoid letting them go in accordance with the Employment Act. Financial Secretary Marlon Johnson said yesterday officials are still

considering whether to extend the unemployment benefits. It is not clear if the government will extend the grace period provision beyond this month. Mr Pinder said yesterday: “The government is trying its best to open the economy so they don’t have to extend unemployment SEE PAGE FOUR

By KHRISNA RUSSELL Tribune Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net PINERIDGE MP Frederick McAlpine says he remains in the “valley of decision” regarding his political future, but he doesn’t think he’ll make any moves right now. Yesterday, the outspoken

Free National Movement MP said while he remains a member of the governing party, he isn’t sure of its political prospects for the general election in 2022. Yet, he hasn’t made up his mind on the next step. However Mr McAlpine said he’s leaving his options open. “At the end of the day

I don’t see what the Free National Movement has to campaign on,” Mr McAlpine told The Tribune. “Much of the country is unemployed. The hotels are closed. What are you going to campaign on, Oban? The 60 percent VAT increase? Hurricane Dorian? What?” SEE PAGE FOUR

WHAT HAPPENED TO ALL THOSE PROMISES? By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net A PROMINENT Freeport attorney yesterday voiced fears that the latest bid to revive Freeport’s economy will be “an exercise in futility” unless the Grand Bahama Port Authority’s (GBPA) ownership changes. Terence Gape, senior partner at Dupuch & Turnquest, told Tribune Business

THE GRAND Bahama Port Auhtority HQ the “wonderful ideas” proposed by the Revitalization and Economic Expansion of Freeport committee would ultimately “get nowhere” without the Hayward and

St George families being replaced by an investor with the capital and knowhow to execute them. He pointed to what he described as numerous broken promises in the April 2016 memorandum of understanding (MoU) that the GBPA, Hutchison Whampoa and the Freeport-based entities they control as one factor behind his scepticism. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

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