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Staff left short in Baha Mar pay L! ADS SEL PHOTO 351 002 / 502-2

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Feelings are mixed on salary settlement

By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net  WHILE some former employees of Baha Mar yesterday expressed no disappointment in receiving their settlement sums from the beleaguered resort, others complained of the low amount offered as part of the resort’s Claims Committee payout process. A number of former employees suggested to reporters that they were satisfied with the amounts they had received during the first day of the Claims Committee’s payout exercise at the Crystal Palace Hotel Casino yesterday. None of the employees questioned by reporters at the site gave any signs of discontent over a potential discrepancy with the amount they received and the amount listed on their termination letters. However, one former employee who spoke to The Tribune later said while the process “went pretty smooth,â€? he felt that former employees “should have been paid moreâ€?. The former worker,

THE SCENE at the Crystal Palace Hotel Casino yesterday as former Baha Mar workers arrived to collect salary they were owed. Photo: Tim Clarke/Tribune Staff speaking on condition of anonymity, also said it wasn’t clear what the payout represented, and also that nothing was mentioned about pension payments. The employee was also angered by a release document employees had to sign to receive their cheques, which said upon

receipt of the payout, they would not make a claim against Baha Mar or Perfect Luck Ltd, the special purpose vehicle set up for this exercise. The employee, who first worked for Baha Mar’s Leadership Development Institute (LDI) and later for the Grand Hyatt Hotel, also said when he sent an email

to the Claims Committee about his concerns, he said he was informed that he “should be happy with what I got and that it is on a take it or leave it basis�. That, he claimed, came after he was told by the Claims Committee last Thursday that he could review his payout letter with a lawyer, but thought

it was too short notice to do so. “How can somebody find a lawyer in that space of time and see if it’s accurate and then you have to go and pick up your cheque?� he said. “(They gave me) about four to five days to find a lawyer.� SEE PAGES TWO & THREE

PM TOLD TO CHECK HIS FACTS OVER HOSPITAL ACCUSATIONS By SANCHESKA DORSETT Tribune Staff Reporter sdorsett@tribunemedia.net  FREE National Movement Leader Dr Hubert Minnis suggested yesterday that Prime Minister Perry Christie “check his factsâ€?

before making “untrue, reckless comments� about the Killarney MP’s tenure as minister of health. In an interview with The Tribune, Dr Minnis denied leaving the Maternity Ward at the Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) in a bad

state and questioned why the prime minister waited four and half years to fix the ward, if Mr Christie thought it was “so terrible�. In fact, Dr Minnis said the only reason the prime minister is renovating the hospital now, is because

“elections are right around the corner.� His comments came one day after Mr Christie said that when the PLP won the election in 2012, and when Dr Minnis demitted office as minister of health, the latter left the Maternity

Ward “in a state not fit for women to go and have babies.� He also said that one of the operating theatres was “so bad� it was only used in an emergency. SEE PAGE SIX

CARNIVAL ‘WAS NEVER MEANT TO BE PROFITABLE’ By RICARDO WELLS Tribune Staff Reporter rwells@tribunemedia.net

BAHAMAS Junkanoo Carnival was never designed to work as a “profit exercise�, according to Bahamas National Festival Commission Chairman Paul Major. Responding to questions yesterday at a press conference in which the BNFC revealed its economic impact assessment of the event’s second year, Mr Major condemned opponents of the festival who continue to look at country’s annual investment, instead of the carnival’s “economic impact�. He said the festival has never been and will never be about turning a profit on investment, contending that no variation of the event hosted around the world has generated a profit for the host nation. “Nowhere in the world is a carnival a profit venture. In Trinidad they spend, I think we estimated somewhere around, based on the conversion, $40m a year,� said Mr Major. SEE PAGE FIVE

COLLIE SAYS CARNIVAL WAS COMPLETELY MISMANAGED

By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net FREE National Movement Chairman Sidney Collie yesterday condemned this year’s Junkanoo Carnival as a “completely mismanaged event� after it was revealed that the annual festival was again over budget for the second time. Highlighting the stalled release of the economic impact report, Mr Collie underscored the critical need for increased transparency from government officials. He said the Christie administration’s widespread failures were crippling the tourism industry and chasing tourists away. SEE PAGE FIVE

TWO JAILED FOR TAKING PART IN MURDER PLOT

35 YEARS IN PRISON FOR KILLING GIRLFRIEND

TWO men were sentenced to 30 years in prison yesterday after a Supreme Court judge condemned their “casual� acceptance to involve themselves in a murder plot. Rashad Sullivan and Patrickedo Rose, both 26, appeared before Justice

A MAN was sentenced to 35 years in prison yesterday in the fatal stabbing of his girlfriend that occurred two years ago. Reuben Baker, 32, appeared before Justice Deborah Fraser for the court’s decision on a punishment for the November 16, 2014

By LAMECH JOHNSON Tribune Staff Reporter ljohnson@tribunemedia.net

Bernard Turner to learn what punishment would be handed to them concerning the November 2012 murder of Dario “China� Knowles, 25, at Lincoln Boulevard. Last December, a jury returned 10-2 guilty verdicts on conspiracy to commit murder and murder. The latter verdict was not accepted by the court. SEE PAGE SEVEN

By LAMECH JOHNSON Tribune Staff Reporter ljohnson@tribunemedia.net

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

murder of Carmine Jean. Jean was involved in an argument with her boyfriend at their home on Alfred Way off Winders Terrace. She was stabbed twice in the upper back, once in both shoulders and once in the abdomen. At a previous hearing, probation officer Sagina Pratt testified about SEE PAGE SEVEN


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