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VOLUME:116 No.265, DECEMBER 12TH, 2018
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‘Stop giving us the runaround’
Nurses allege deliberate bid to delay strike By RICARDO WELLS Tribune Staff Reporter rwells@tribunemedia.net
BAHAMAS Nurses Union president Amancha Williams yesterday slammed labour officials for what she called a deliberate delay to certify her union’s strike vote, claiming officials were pandering to the public for support instead of doing the “right thing”. In a strong rebuke of the Department of Labour’s
actions over the past week, Ms Williams said officials were intentionally working to “keep us from getting our vote”, hitting out at claims made by Labour Director John Pinder over what grievances were filed with department. On Sunday, Mr Pinder asserted the BNU only sought to prevent the implementation of the Public Hospital Authority’s proposed new shift system.
DESPITE announcing in June that the Minnis administration would have a renegotiated Oban Energies deal in a matter of weeks, Labour Minister Dion Foulkes said yesterday the government is still looking to pin down a firm date to rework the Heads of Agreement. Speaking with reporters before Cabinet’s weekly
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MOST shanty town dwellers in unregulated communities across Abaco have legal status permitting them to reside in the country, according to Labour Minister Dion Foulkes, who yesterday revealed an estimated population size of around 3,500 residents. Mr Foulkes said around 20 percent of those surveyed during the summer census exercise were undocumented, adding the six shanty towns were home to at least 332 children. He remained tightlipped on how many shanty town residents were Bahamian, telling reporters outside the Churchill Building the full report was still before Cabinet. “The report has a breakdown of those residents
BTC FINED $100K FOR DELAYING ‘SWITCHERS’
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meeting yesterday morning, Mr Foulkes, who co-chairs the Cabinet subcommittee looking into Oban, revealed a negotiation team has been appointed to renegotiate the HOA with the principals of Oban Energies, but noted no official date had been set to start those negotiations. Mr Foulkes said in the interim, the government has adopted a technical report produced
By AVA TURNQUEST Tribune Chief Reporter aturnquest@tribunemedia.net
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By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
OBAN 2 DEAL? UMM, MAYBE NEXT MONTH By RICARDO WELLS Tribune Staff Reporter rwells@tribunemedia.net
LEGAL STATUS FOR MAJORITY IN SHANTY TOWN CENSUS
GUNNED TO DEATH PEOPLE broke down in tears last night after a male was gunned down in a shooting in Fort Fincastle. Full story - Page 2. Photo: Terrel W Carey Sr/Tribune Staff
REGULATORS have ordered the Bahamas Telecommunications Company to pay 50 percent of its fine for last year’s Black Friday mobile number portability meltdown to affected consumers. The Utilities Regulation and Competition Authority, in unveiling the total $102,004 penalty levied on BTC, said some $51,400 would be used to provide a $100 credit to each of the 514 impacted subscribers. The portability system’s two-day meltdown impacted what is traditionally viewed as the busiest sales day of the year. FULL STORY - SEE BUSINESS
POACHERS’ JAIL TERMS CUT IN HALF By NICO SCAVELLA Tribune Staff Reporter nscavella@tribunemedia.net
MORE than 40 convicted Dominican poachers have had their one-year prison sentences reduced by half on appeal. The Court of Appeal ruled on Monday that the 45 poachers will now serve six months behind bars. The basis for the shortening of their sentences, The Tribune understands,
POACHERS are apprehended was because the sentencing magistrate did not take into account any of the mitigating factors, nor their guilty pleas.
However, the 18-month prison sentence of the captain, Radhames Hernandez, for firearm and ammunition charges, still stands, as it was not interfered with by the appellate judges. Additionally, the appellate court found that the sentencing magistrate did not err to have the vessel the poachers were on, the ‘Ronnye’, forfeited, because it was under her discretion to do so.
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ALICIA WALLACE WHEN SORRY STILL SEEMS TO BE THE HARDEST WORD
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