Archive for February, 2009
Welcome to ‘Caymallywood!’
(CNS): Cayman’s glitterati were out in full force on Friday evening for the launch of the Cayman Islands Film Commission (CIFC), an initiative by the Cayman Islands Investment Bureau to try and encourage Hollywood’s film makers to come to Cayman and put us in the movies. With The Firm, Haven, Cayman Went and others already under its belt there is hope that, with a one-stop shop film commission movie makers could be persuaded that Cayman has what they need.
Speaking to an audience of local dignitaries and even Hollywood celebs, at Camana Bay, Charles Clifford, Minister for Tourism said that it would create new economic opportunities for Cayman. He said everyone such as drivers, hoteliers, retailers as well as local film makers and actors would benefit from the project.
“The film industry is one of the most resilient industries in the world so we feel we doing the right thing creating a film commission,” he said adding that it would be promoted by the DoT around the world. “As we launch the commission tonight I encourage you to spread the word.”
Dax Basdeo the Director of the CIB said it was the first step towards an exciting opportunity for Cayman. He said aside from the location, the reputation of customer service, there was a pool of talented individuals and a creative element in Cayman that would help the commission to succeed. He said the commission was important development as it would provide a one stop shop to help film makers with all of their needs. “The foundation is in place, the talent is poised and the stage is set for us to develop the local film industry,” he added.
Celebrity John O’Hurley was alsoencouraging and his amusing key note speech he said Cayman had put itself up to compete in the world and it needed three basic things which included organised production facilities, with hospitality second to none and incentive programmes.
“Films will not come to any place anymore unless somebody has done that,” he said. The good news he said was that Cayman had an extraordinary story to tell and had the tax incentives as well as the talent and extraordinary hospitality which was crucial. He said if Cayman got it right it could make money. “When the circus comes to town they pay big bucks but it you don’t have it organised the circus doesn’t come,” O’Hurley added.
The two drivers behind the creation of the commission are Justin Berfield, a US actor who played Reese in Malcolm in the Middle and Jason Felts who have been volunteering their skill and services to help shape the commission. The first major step in the promotion has been the production of a DVD show reel which highlights Cayman’s potential as a location. The short film shows that Cayman is not just beaches and underwater scenes but has all the same things one would find in the US, from churches to supermarkets, as well as historic and natural sites that could be utilised for numerous film, commercial, TV or documentary productions.
The need for a film commission is according to the bureau to create a one stop shop that can help film producers through the necessary legal steps and source talent to help them when they choose Cayman as their film location.
Job fair for young workers
(CNS): As the recession starts to bite the job market for school and college leavers will become even more competitive, so young people wanting a head start are being offered the chance to meet potential employers at the annual Chamber of Commerce Career, Education, Training and Job Expo. CUC, Deloitte, Foster’s KPMG, Butterfield Bank, Maples, PricewaterhouseCoopers, SteppingStones and a number of government departments including the police will be there looking for bright young rec,ruits.
Students and individuals seeking to improve their skills or to gain qualifications will also have an opportunity to meet with representatives from both local and international universities and colleges, alongside representatives from UCCI, ICCI, the University of Tampa and Savannah College, George.
The Department of Employment Relations will be registering the unemployed.
”Now more than ever, the Job Placement Unit is anxious to reinforce the importance of career planning as the route to career success to high-schoolers, college students and the public in general. The JPU will also be using this opportunity to promote job-search methods and application techniques while promoting the employment services offered at the DER,” said Jennifer Smith M.Ed., MSc.HRM. Chartered MCIPD, Assistant Director Head, Job Placement Unit.
The fair takes place at the Sir Vassel Johnson Hall on the UCCI campus andis open to students only from 10:00am to 4:00pm on Friday, 13 February, and open to the general public from 10:00am. to 4:00pm on Saturday 14 February. This is the second year that the Chamber in partnership with UCCI has presented this recruitment and education forum for both business and educational establishment to promote themselves to Cayman’s young workforce.
Valerie Tzucker, Human Resources Training Manager for The Ritz-Carlton, Grand Cayman, said it offered an ideal forum to connect with a diverse pool of talented potential employees. “We participated last year and were thrilled to present The Ritz-Carlton within such a well organised showcase of professional opportunities,” she added.
UBS future hangs on tax case
(Guardian): The future of the giant Swiss bank, UBS rests on the outcome of tense negotiations with US investigators as its long-running multi-billion-dollar tax evasion case concludes this month. A series of hearings in Washington over the next four weeks will determine whether UBS faces criminal prosecutions and possibly even the loss of its US bank licence. Go to article
Red tape and red carpet for work permits
(CNS): The entire work permit system is about to be overhauled with the introduction of a new accreditation system. Around 4,000 local employers will have to achieve certain standards before being able to renew work permits, submit new applications or apply for key employee status for their staff. Despite what appears to be a complex and bureaucratic system, the government has said it will ensure speedier decisions, prevent employer exploitation and safeguard Caymanian jobs.
Criticisms that the system is loaded with red tape have already surfaced, but the system is now under review and is not yet a done deal. Government, however, is hoping that the red carpet of benefits offered by the system will outweigh the red tape. Leader of Government Business Kurt Tibbetts said that when he first heard the task force’s proposals he too felt it sounded bureaucratic but has since seen the benefits.
Speaking at last week’s Cabinet media briefing, Tibbetts said that the tremendous increase in work permits had also led to an increase in the number of immigration offences and the new Immigration Accreditation System proposal is designed to stop work permit abuse. Tibbetts said there was increased evidence of employers acting unscrupulously, employees being treated unfairly, employers failing to comply with statutory pension and health insurance requirements, and failing to fulfil their responsibility to recruit, train and provide advancement opportunities to Caymanians.
The underlying principle of the new system places the onus back on employers to prove that they are compliant with the law and not abusing the process, rather than for the Immigration Department or other agencies, such as the Department of Employment Relations to check if employers are telling the truth.
“At the same time, it was recognized that employers who comply fully with all statutory requirements and who have a proven track record of employing Caymanians should be rewarded for this commitment,” Tibbetts said. “The challenge therefore was to devise a system which minimizes the opportunity for abuse of immigration and other statutory requirements, and at the same time creates a progressive system of benefits for employers who are compliant in varying degrees.”
The challenge now will be for employers to get accreditation before presenting their business staffing plans and making any work permit applications. Chief Immigration Officer Franz Manderson said that every non-private employer — everyone with a Trade and Business licence, regardless of the number of employees or size of the firm — will need to get accreditation if they are employing or intend to employ even one person on a work permit. Aside from the extra paperwork, employers will also be required to pay a minimum fee of $250 plus an admin fee of $50 no matter what the size of the company.
The proposed system is now under consultation and both Tibbetts and Manderson are encouraging employers to go online, score themselves under the new system and raise their concerns and queries so problems can be ironed out before it is implemented.
“It may be, for example, that we will change the flat fee with larger companies paying more for accreditation than small businesses,” Manderson said, adding that the system will take around nine months to roll out. Employers will be given this grace period tobecome compliant with the new rules and work out the level of accreditation they need to achieve, and Manderson also noted that some new legislation would be required.
Tibbetts explained that the concept of compliance would apply in a tier system, with every employer reaching the very basic level, but after that each employer had the option to increase their accreditation level for more benefits.
“The system should allow employers to obtain varying levels (‘tiers’) of accreditation based on their degree of compliance,” Tibbetts explained. “While all employers would be required to meet the lowest level before any work permits may be issued, those who exceed the minimum requirements on a consistent basis will receive greater benefits. A points system would be used to assess compliance with requirements in order to ensure objectivity in the process.”
Applications for accreditation will be made to three teams within the Immigration Department — one for the financial services sector, one for tourism, and one for everything else — who will add up the points.
“Representatives from the relevant industries will assist in initial training of the team members,” Tibbetts added. “After receiving accreditation, employers must apply for its renewal every one to two years. The renewal process will include a review of the company’s Business Staffing Plan if it has one, and the company may be required to undergo a site inspection.”
The LoGB said applications for accreditation will be scored against six core criteria, with points being awarded to reflect the degree of compliance. He said the first was compliance with statutory licensing requirements, such as holding a licence, paying pensions and heath insurance. The second is talent development, ie in-house training programmes, scholarships for Caymanians and promotion of Caymanians. Number three deals employment practices, such as fair pay, percentage of Caymanians in management, health and safety practices and the company’s disaster preparedness programme. The fourth criteria includes the company’s sponsorship and charitable work and would also include people serving on boards. The fifth element would be the type of businesses — those that are in need here or developing new ideas would gain points. Finally, the degree to which Caymanians are owners of the company or enjoying profit sharing will also provide a way to gain points.
Based on that there will be five levels of accreditation calculated on the total number of points awarded in the assessment. At the lowest end ‘probationary accreditation’ employers will have to show that they are largely compliant with statutory requirements. They will be limited however to being able to apply for work permit renewals only.
At tier one level the company must show that they meet all legal requirements and that they have a viable business operation with contracts for services. They will be entitled to apply for work permit grants and renewals but not key employee applications.
At tier two, the requirements are the same as for tier one, but the company must show evidence of talent development programmes, good employment practices and community programmes. They will be entitled to apply for the grant and renewal of work permits and submit key employee applications.
“Tiers three and four are where the company is awarded additional points based on their level of participation in programmes relating to talent development and community programmes. Bonus points are also available for business sector and business ownership. Companies in tiers three and four will have work permit decisions made within three working days. They will also have a dedicated account manager in the Immigration Department. Applications other than for work permits will be dealt with on an expedited basis, though there will be a fee payable for this service,” The LoGB added.
Tier 5, the highest level of accreditation, will only go to firms who have excellent programmes in place for talent development, employment practices and community involvement. As well as having a dedicated account manager, work permit decisions will be guaranteed within three working days. Other applications will be dealt with on an expedited basis without payment of an expedited fee.
Despite the apparent complexity, both Tibbetts and Manderson denied it was over bureaucratic and that accredited companies would get their permits more quickly. However, accreditation will need to be reviewed annually and the onus will be on the employer to make their application or show they have improved to get to a higher level.
No official start date for implementation has been given and Tibbetts stated that, while the methodology was approved in principle, it would now be reviewed and input collected from the private sector before the system gets the green light. “It is possible that our private sector partners will object to one or more of the proposals, or they may have better ideas for minimizing work permit abuse. I look forward to receivingtheir feedback,” he said.
For details of the system go to www.immigration.gov.ky
National Gallery ‘Shows’ international artist
(CNS): In keeping with the National Gallery’s mission that aims to “promote and encourage appreciation and practice of visual arts”, the Gallery is hosting the American collage artist, Leslie Shows. Based in San Francisco, California, Leslie makes large, intricate collage paintings that explore the relationship between human civilization and landscape. Drawing from geology and the natural sciences, as well as popular culture and the history of landscape painting,
Shows makes densely layered works that play with both minute and vast scales of time and space.
Leslie has had solo shows with Jack Hanley Gallery in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New York. Her work has been exhibited at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Orange County Museum of Art, the Oakland Art Museum, and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. Her work has been featured in Harper’s Magazine, and written about in the New Yorker, ArtReview, Artforum.com, the L.A. Weekly and the S.F. Bay Guardian, among other forums.
“Part of the Gallery’s mission is to provide local artists and students with exposure to artwork from other countries. As such, we are delighted to host Ms. Shows whose unique approach to her art will be of interest to many artists and art lovers on the island” said Natalie Coleman, Director Designate of the National Gallery.
The lecture will be held this Tuesday, February 3, beginning at 6:00pm at the National Gallery in Harbour Place. Participants will have the opportunity to take part in a thorough discussion with Shows on her vision, inspiration and interpretation of her work.
Artists and interested persons can register to attend this free lecture by calling the National Gallery at 945-8111 or e-mailing Mona on communications.ng@candw.ky
Violence-free elections in Iraq
(New York Times): Iraqis voted on Saturday for local representatives, on an almost violence-free election day aimed at creating provincial councils that more closely represent Iraq’s ethnic, sectarian and tribal balance. By nightfall, there were no confirmed deaths, and children played soccer on closed-off streets in a generally joyous atmosphere. Security was extraordinary. Driving was banned in most of the country to prevent suicide bombers from attacking any of the more than 6,000 polling places and security checkpoints, often spaced just yards apart. Go to article
Schools urged to teach good parenting skills
(The Independent): All children should be taught good parenting in school, the Church of England’s Children’s Society said in the most far-reaching inquiry into childhood in the UK. Today’s youngsters are under more stress than any previous generation, because of family breakdown, increasing commercial pressures and exam stress, leaving them "anxious and troubled", says the report, by the former Downing Street adviser Richard Layard and Judith Dunn, a developmental psychologist. Go To article
Expensive blow for Michael Phelps
(Times Online): A mixture of shock and disbelief swept the United States yesterday as the nation woke up to an abject apology from the man it had hailed as its greatest Olympic athlete. Michael Phelps was a hero and role model for millions but now his career will be stained forever by claims that he smoked drugs. The world’s greatest swimmer was forced to say sorry after a British tabloid newspaper showed a picture of him appearing to smoke marijuana through a glass pipe, known as a bong, at a student party just weeks after creating history at the Beijing Olympic Games. Go tp article
Davos finds no answers to crisis
BBC): The World Economic Forum has ended with a call to rebuild the global economic system. Founder Klaus Schwab announced a "global redesign initiative" to reform banking, regulation and corporate governance. For five days, more than 2,000 business and political leaders discussed what some here called the "crisis of capitalism". However, most discussions described the problems, not solutions. Go to article
British workers strike for jobs
(BBC): Wildcat strikes are "not defensible", Gordon Brown has told those angry at the employment of foreign workers. Hundreds of employees staged walkouts across the UK over the use of foreign staff at a Lincolnshire refinery. The PM told the BBC’s Politics Show he understood workers’ fears, but walkouts were "not the right thing to do". The Tories said they did not back the strikes either but said Mr Brown’s 2007 "British jobs for British workers" pledge had been exposed as "fiction". Go to article