11062020 NEWS AND BUSINESS

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The Tribune

Volume:117 No.238, NOVEMBER 6TH, 2020

Established 1903

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WEEKEND: LOOKING SHARP IN THE WORKPLACE PAYS OFF

THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1

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Friday, November 6, 2020 photography fashion art gardening history intervie w puzzles animals

Expert warns fall-off in numbers doesn’t signal COVID crisis is over By TANYA SMITHCARTWRIGHT Tsmith-cartwright@ tribunemedia.net A LOCAL infectious disease expert is urging residents not to become relaxed about the apparent downward trend of COVID-19 cases, explaining other factors might be contributing to those lower numbers. Dr Nikkiah Forbes, director of the National HIV/ AIDS and Infectious Disease Programme at the Ministry of Health, said scientific data must be taken into account when making a determination on lower

numbers and controlling an outbreak of COVID-19. “So yes, cases are starting to trend down, however, there are things that influence the number of persons testing positive,” she said yesterday. “It’s called biases in testing reporting. There are other factors that contribute to that. For example if you have a two-day lockdown, maybe persons aren’t going in to get tested on those days, or the lab may be compiling samples and running them every two days. So you do have to consider other things.” SEE PAGE THREE

LABOUR Director John Pinder said officials are excited about the spin-off economic benefits to come from major resort openings next month. While Baha Mar this week announced its phased reopening will begin on December 17, Atlantis has also said it plans to begin accepting guests before year’s end. With the Bahamas’ economic rebound finally within view, Mr Pinder said officials are hopeful both resorts will be seen

as a benchmark for opening by smaller hotels and businesses. However, he said, officials are keeping their fingers crossed that an uptick in visitors won’t spark another surge of COVID-19 cases. “We are really excited to hear now that Baha Mar is taking steps to try to open before the end of the year,” Mr Pinder told The Tribune yesterday. “That brings relief to at least 1,500 of their workers that I am hearing will be called back to work who are on extended layoffs at this time. SEE PAGE THREE

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WATCHING AND WAITING FOR THE US TO DECIDE

SEE PAGE EIGHT

‘KEEP YOUR NOSE OUT OF BANKS’ REPORTS’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net COMMERCIAL bankers are urging the Central Bank to stay in its lane and “not intervene in financial reporting matters” after the regulator’s recent COVID19 guidance release. Gowon Bowe, Fidelity Bank (Bahamas) chief executive, voiced concerns that the Central Bank’s statement on “loan accounting and provisioning” threatened to take the supervisory body “outside its remit”. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

RESORT’S REOPENING SEEN AS TRIGGER FOR RECOVERY By KHRISNA RUSSELL Tribune Chief Reporter krussell@tribunemedia.net

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Looking stylish in the workp lace

‘WE MUST NOT LET OUR GUARD DOWN’

LIFE COACH TURNS AUTHOR

THE DONALD DEFIANT (AND A BIT DERANGED)

DONALD Trump made a string of claims without evidence about the US election in a rambling press conference yesterday as counting of votes continued and increasingly looked likely to favour challenger Joe Biden. After making his claims, Trump refused to answer any questions from reporters - including one shouted question which asked him if he was being a sore loser. See page ten for the latest from the vote.

HUNT FOR KNIFEMAN AFTER FATAL STABBING By EARYEL BOWLEG Tribune Staff Reporter ebowleg@tribunemedia.net

A MAN died in hospital after he was stabbed at a Joe Farrington Road residence yesterday morning, police said. Police said shortly after 10am, officers were alerted to a stabbing incident that occurred on Joe Farrington Road. SEE PAGE FIVE

HOSPITAL TO PAY SACKED WORKER $30K By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

A FORMER Doctors Hospital employee has been awarded more than $30,000 after the healthcare provider was found to have unfairly terminated him following an industrial accident. Simone Fitzcharles, the Industrial Tribunal’s vice-president, ruled on September 18 the hospital breached both its own

DOCTORS HOSPITAL policy on “accommodating” injured workers and the Employment Act over how it treated Preston Clarke. Her verdict revealed Doctors Hospital had already decided to

“disengage” Mr Clarke prior to receiving a doctor’s letter, which gave him “the all-clear” but “recommended he be given light duties”, a day before he was due to return to work. Ms Fitzcharles said the healthcare provider’s defence that it had paid Mr Clarke all severance due to him under the Employment Act “does not obliterate a claim for unfair dismissal” by a worker. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS

Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper

BACKYARD ISSUES ON FRONT LINE FOR POLITICS

SEE PAGE NINE


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