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VOLUME:116 No.226, NOVEMBER 18TH, 2019
HO US E & 16 THE PEOPLE’S PAPER: $1
SPORT: BAHAMAS THROUGH TO GOLD CUP QUALIFIERS
PAGES
MILLIONS LOST IN COMPUTER FIASCO PLP’s failed deal to digitise vital patient records
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net A FURIOUS legal battle is brewing over an $18m Public Hospitals Authority (PHA) contract that a Cabinet minister admitted has “crashed” and delivered zero value for taxpayers and patients alike. Dr Duane Sands, minister of health, told Tribune Business that the much-touted integrated healthcare management system (iHMS) deal that the former Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) administration signed in 2016 “to bring the public
health system into the 21st century” had delivered none of the promised benefits and left taxpayers facing a multi-million dollar loss. Describing the situation as “very, very sensitive”, he bluntly branded the contract agreed with Allscripts Healthcare Solutions, a US-based publicly-traded company, and its strategic partner, Infor Lawson, as “a bust” for the Bahamian people. “We’ve had very big problems with that,” Dr Sands said in response to Tribune Business inquiries.
THE cost of Hurricane Dorian’s impact on The Bahamas is $3.4bn, more than a quarter of the country’s GDP, according to the Inter-American Development Bank. The figure accounts for damage such as the effect the disaster has had on assets in every sector; losses such as the goods and services that have not
SEE PAGE SIX
By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net
PRIME Minister Dr Hubert Minnis says he favours decriminalising possession of small amounts of marijuana and making the substance legal for medicinal and/or scientific purposes. Becoming the first sitting prime minister to publicly support some form of marijuana decriminalisation, he told The Tribune yesterday he hopes the decriminalisation process will happen before the end of this term. He said he is eagerly awaiting the release of a report by the Bahamas National Commission on Marijuana to help chart the way forward on the substance, which has been
FISHERMEN ‘HIJACKED HELPING HAITIANS’
SEE PAGE THREE
been produced or provided until full recovery and reconstruction; and additional costs such as outlays required to provide goods and services as a result of the disaster. The IDB estimates that Dorian will cost the country one percentage of its GDP, implying the economy will grow 0.9 percent post-disaster, resulting in a decrease in salaries of $51.3m and capital income of $60.9m.
PM GIVES BACKING FOR LEGAL MARIJUANA
SEE PAGE FIVE
By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
DORIAN DAMAGES BILL SOARS TO $3.4 BILLION By RASHAD ROLLE Tribune Staff Reporter rrolle@tribunemedia.net
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GOLDEN GLAMOUR GLAMOUR was the name of the game at the Miss World Bahamas fashion show this weekend. For a full report, see Friday’s Weekend section Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff
AN Inagua-based fisherman yesterday described the “traumatising” moment that a group of stranded Haitian who he and his two friends were helping allegedly hijacked their boat at knifepoint and forced them to jump overboard to avoid being killed. Lawrence Handfield, 49, said that he, Quinton Smith and Eddington Burrows Jr were all forced to abandon their fishing vessel to avoid being injured, fatally or otherwise, by ten knife-wielding Haitian men they were transporting to another location on the island. SEE PAGE SEVEN
HARBOUR ISLAND PROJECT BOSS SUES FOR $1M By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
A BITTER $1m legal battle has erupted between the developer of a controversial Harbour Island marina and its former project manager who has a history of convictions and run-ins with law enforcement. Bernard Ross - who was convicted of heroin possession in the US in 1976, serving a prison sentence
BERNARD Ross and his wife - is alleging that Michael Wiener and his company, 4M Harbour Island Ltd,
reneged on making a $500,000 payment that was agreed as part of a deal that would see him exit all involvement with the development. In a lawsuit filed in the California federal court, Mr Ross is alleging he has “suffered at least $1m in damages” on the basis that Mr Wiener is unlikely to make the next $500,000 installment payment, due on January 17, 2019. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
Nassau & Bahama Islands’ Leading Newspaper
INSIGHT
LIVES NEED TO BE REBUILT, NOT JUST PROPERTY
SEE PAGE NINE