business@tribunemedia.net
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2018
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Dingman to face default judgment By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net A LYFORD Cay resident’s former business partners have been given permission by a New York judge to seek a default judgment against him over the collapse of his Nassau restaurant empire. Judge Naomi Buchwald last Monday allowed Erik Gordon and Ryan Giunta to move against Jamie Dingman, son of late worldfamous entrepreneur, Michael, after he missed a 30-day deadline to hire new attorneys or respond to their revived fraud complaint. Mr Dingman’s previous
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‘All homes benefit’ if port wins expansion By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
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LL “homes across New Providence” will benefit if the island’s sole cargo port operator expands into Nassau’s cruise port and LNG bunkering, its top executive argued yesterday. Michael Maura, chief executive of BISX-listed Arawak Port Development Company (APD), told Tribune Business that diversifying into new opportunities would not only
$300k Memories guarantee creates Lucayan dispute By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Christie administration’s continued payment of $300,000 per month to Hutchison Whampoa, despite the Memories resort’s closure, is central to an ongoing dispute over the Government’s Grand Lucayan deal. Tribune Business can reveal that, as part of the deal to entice Canadian tour operator, Sunwing, to open the former Reef hotel with its Memories brand, the former government agreed to guarantee its monthly lease/rental payments to
MICHAEL SCOTT the Hong Kong-based conglomerate. Memories’ deal foundered after Hutchison Whampoa, as landlord, failed to repair Hurricane Matthew-related damage to the property in the aftermath of the October 2016 storm, resulting in the Canadian resort’s January
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Act review could ‘throw Bahamas back into chaos’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Government “will throw The Bahamas back into the chaos of haphazard, checkerboard development” if it goes too far in “watering down” key planning laws, a QC warned yesterday. Fred Smith QC, the Callenders & Co attorney and partner, told Tribune Business he was “viscerally opposed” to any reforms that “devalued” the Planning and Subdivisions Act at the expense of the wider public interest
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FRED SMITH QC and environment. Speaking out after Desmond Bannister, minister of works, revealed that the Government has created a high-level working group to develop “a
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* Bunkering, cruise moves key to lower tariffs * APD: Diversification will cut consumer costs * ‘Pursuing’ growth with partners ‘on board’
ARAWAK CAY PORT
$4.93 Bahamas ‘in best position in region’ to target groups
By NATARIO MCKENZIE
Tribune Business Reporter
nmckenzie@tribunemedia.net
boost shareholder returns but potentially enable the company to lower port tariffs and fees. He explained that the shipping companies, and major importers, could then pass these reduced costs on to Bahamian households through lower grocery and consumer goods prices,
THE Bahamas is “in the best position in the Caribbean” to target the lucrative group travel market, a senior tourism official saying yesterday: “We see this as having huge growth potential.” Joy Jibrilu, pictured, the director-general of tourism, speaking at a Sustainable Tourism Policy Framework and Disaster Risk Management workshop, said: “We just feel that we are poised
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