Archive for February, 2013
Premier denies return to UDP
(CNS): The premier has said she will be running for office with her Cabinet colleagues and not on the UDP ticket, despite mounting speculation that she has already made a commitment to return to the political party as the election approaches. She also denied signing any agreement with the UK and her current ministerial colleagues to stay with the interim administration until after the 22 May election. Although there is still considerable suspicion about how real the split is between the current premier and the former premier, Juliana O’Connor Connolly said Thursday that she remained committed to her colleagues in the minority government.
However, she also made it clear that if she was returned to office she would be prepared to join any government of integrity if she could secure a Cabinet seat for the people of Cayman Brac.
As the race to return to the Legislative Assembly begins in earnest how the cabinet ministers who are all former UDP members will mount their campaign remains up in the air. Fielding questions from the press about their intentions, the ministers have given little away other than to imply they will be running in a group together.
While four of the ministers will be running in two of the three main battlegrounds, the likelihood that the premier will be returned in her constituency of Cayman Brac and Little Cayman means the UDP is unlikely to field a candidate in the Sister Islands and there appears to be an expectation that O’Connor-Connolly will support the return of a UDP government under the leadership of her former party colleague, McKeeva Bush.
However, the premier said Thursday that she was content with her Cabinet colleagues and that her part in the transition to the interim government was done for the sake of democracy and no secret agreements to bind her to the new group were required. She said that her main concern was serving in a government that was honest and had integrity and until she saw evidence to the contrary she was remaining with her current colleagues. “I am happy to be a part of this government,” she added.
O’Connor-Connolly said that if she was re-elected by her constituents and invited to join a government, provided it was one of honesty and integrity that would take her country forward and if her constituents wanted her to accept, she would join it. If not, she was prepared to remain on the back bench as a “lone ranger, crying in the wilderness for the next four years."
So far, O’Connor-Connolly and Moses Kirkconnell, the deputy leader of the PPM, are the only candidates who have confirmed that they will be fighting for the two seats in the Sister Islands. While the two incumbents are both expected to retain those seats, the final list of candidates on Cayman Brac and Little Cayman is expected to be considerably shorter than the three larger constituencies of George Town, Bodden Town and the now unpredictable battled ground of West Bay.
However, in an election that remains wide open, it is impossible to say how many people on the Sister Islands may decide to throw theirhat in the ring and make a bid for political office.
O’Connor-Connolly, in conjunction with District Administration, will be holding a public meeting at the Aston Rutty Centre starting at 6pm
Five year policy to meet health challenges
(CNS): The health minister has launched a new national health policy, which he said is designed to cover the challenges facing government in the provision of affordable health care over the next five years, after almost four years in office and only months away from a general election. Following the launch of the education policy by his fellow Cabinet minister last week, it was Mark Scotland’s turn to hand out a policy document at Thursday’s press briefing. He said it would chart the course for government to manage mounting costs and increases in non-communicable diseases plaguing the community up until 2017. Scotland described it as the country’s first overarching guide outlining his vision, goals and objectives.
He said it was put together with the assistance of the World Health Organization and focuses heavily on the increasing problems in Cayman of diseases caused mainly by behaviour, such as heart problems, diabetes and obesity, a growing epidemic in Cayman in the face of rising healthcare costs.
The document reveals that high blood pressure is the top diagnosis in Cayman, with the HSA treating well over 3000 patients. Diabetes is the second most common health problem and mental health issues the third, though the country still does not have a proper treatment centre for people suffering with mental health conditions.
Scotland said Cayman had made some strides in healthcare over the last few years but many challenges remained and he said the plan would help government measure and monitor performance to ensure progress continued to be made in reducing illness and costs.
The press also heard that the Cayman government had talked to the UK about partnering with the British health services to help reduce the cost of medicines by having the UK purchase on behalf of the territory and to see if treating Caymanian patients who need overseas care inthe UK rather than the US.
In addition Scotland revealed that a specialist screening clinic would be held this weekend to test local athletes for their risk of sudden cardiac arrest. Following the death of a young Caymanian footballer, Gerome “Bird” Graham, recently as a result of a sudden heart attack on the field, the minister said the health authorities were partnering with heart specialists from the private health sector and US experts to offer free screening to teenage athletes.
While Scotland said there were no guarantees that such screening was 100% successful, it could detect some warning signals in high performance athletes and at least give some reassurance that they are fit to play or compete.
Graham is not the first young athlete to fall victim to the syndrome and on the international stage basketball player Reggie Lewis and Italian footballer Piermario Morosini also died as a result of a sudden cardiac arrest.
“It can happen at any time, any place, to anyone and without warning,” the health minister said, noting that an estimated 300 high school athletes die each year at sporting events in the US.
Healthcare experts led by a board-certified cardiologist with expertise in evaluating athletes will staff the clinic, which will be screening local athletes who have been invited to attend at the Heart Health Centre.
See the new health policy here.
Burglar scales balcony to steal from tourists
(CNS): A determined burglar climbed up to a second floor balcony to enter an apartment through a patio door in the early hours of Wednesday morning at a holiday condo on Seven Mile Beach police said. The offender stole electrical items as well as a diamond solitaire ring which belonged to a visiting tourist. The police are asking the public to assist in the recovery of the ring for the visitor. If anyone has any information regarding the burglary or the ring they are asked to contact DC 226 Nathan Turner at West Bay CID on 9493999 or by email at Nathan.Turner@RCIPS.ky
Five arrested over street beating
(CNS): Police have arrested three men and two women in connection with an incident in the in the early hours of Wednesday 20 February when a man was attacked and beaten by a gang of people. An RCIPS spokesperson said that the five people were identified and arrested on Thursday and they are currently being questioned in connection with the street brawl which happened in George Town. Police had been called to the junction of Eastern Avenue and North Church Street after receiving a report of a fight. When they arrived there was no one at the scene. However, the victim was found in the Watler's Road area and he confirmed that he had been attacked and beaten.
The assailants demanded money and assaulted him in the process. Nothing was taken but the man was injured. The incident is now being investigated by the officers from CID in George Town who have arrested the five people believed to have been involved in the attack.
Second West Bay C4C candidate out of the gate
(CNS): The second candidate who will be running on the Coalition for Cayman (C4C) platform in West Bay has declared her intention to run. Tara Rivers will be joining Mervin Smith on the C4C ticket in the district race, which is wide open after the UDP split in the wake of McKeeva Bush’s arrest last December. With the former premier’s stranglehold on the district weakened and the UDP vote now split, the independents are hoping they, and not the opposition candidates, can capitalize on the window of opportunity. Rivers, a local lawyer who previously tried her hand in the political arena in 2000, grew up in Mount Pleasant and says she is deeply concerned about the social and economic decline in the district.
Saying it is now time for a new generation of leaders to step forward, she said change requires action. Rivers said education would be an area of focus for her if she is elected.
“Everyone deserves a good education and adequate training. A strong economy requires a balanced and prepared workforce. We need qualified mechanics, doctors, trust officers, hotel managers and mental health professionals, to name a few,” she said. “In order for the country to thrive, all of our people should be able to make a positive contribution, therefore vocational training and special needs education must also be a priority."
Rivers is the first candidate to raise the issue of mental health in Cayman, which, despite being one of the country’s leading health problems, is neglected. As a former board member of Cayman Against Substance Abuse and the Cayman Islands Branch of the British Red Cross, she believes that there is a link between mental health and the country’s social decline.
“For too long, mental health concerns have been on the back burner and our people are suffering as a result. If we look at the social decline of our islands—the high level of recidivism of our young males, drug addiction and the abuse of our children— how can we possibly ignore the mental health needs of our people and hope that they will make a positive contribution to the economy and to society as whole?” she asked.
Rivers said Cayman deserves better representation with accountable and visionary leaders who will lead with integrity.
Currently the Chair of the United World Colleges (Cayman Islands) National Foundation, Rivers was one of the youngest recipients of the UWC scholarship at the age of 15. After receiving her Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from Brandeis University, Rivers joined the Ministry of Youth in 1997, where she formed a 28-member National Youth Policy Task Force, which she led to develop the National Youth Policy for the Cayman Islands (2000). Later that year, at the age of 25, Rivers contested the 2000 elections as the youngest candidate that year and narrowly missed winning a seat.
A qualified lawyer, Rivers currently works with Conyers Dill & Pearman (Cayman) Limited.
Rare iguana mowed down basking on Brac road
(CNS): Another endangered SisterIslands Rock Iguana has become a road casualty on Cayman Brac. Charlie as this latest victim was affectionately known became the sixth iguana killed in fifteen months on the Sister Island’s roads. The Department of Environment (DoE) is urging drivers on the Brac to pay special attention to the roads and adhere to the speed limits after Charlie was mowed down on the Bluff Road’s newly paved asphalt, on 5 February, which the department explained is attractive to the local reptiles.“Rock Iguanas, like all reptiles, are cold-blooded animals. They rely on the sun to heat their bodies, to digest their food and to move from one place to another," a DoE spokesperon said.
"The newly paved asphalt provides a perfect place for them to bask. Sadly, the rate at which they are being killed prevents them from learning the consequences of being on the road,” the department added.
The Sister Islands Rock Iguanas are critically endangered (IUCN Red List, 1996). There are now less than 100 known breeding individuals remaining. These animals are unique to the Sister Islands and the DoE asks that everyone do their part to help protect our endemic species and prevent them from becoming extinct.
Below is a map of the road kill sites as of February 11, The numbers refer to tagged iguanas and the ‘unknown’ mark refers to an iguana that was not previously tagged.
Suspected dengue cases increase again
(CNS): Seven more patients with suspected dengue fever have been reported to the local health authorities this week officials said Thursday. After no new cases were reported during the previous week hopes that the fever may be slowing down were dashed. Of the seven suspected cases only one of the patients had a travel history to an endemic country. None of the people reporting dengue symptoms were admitted to hospital. From the latest cases only one was from West bay which is where most of the local transmissions have occurred. Another patient was from Bodden Town and the remaining five were from George Town.
The public health department said that only one result was received during this week from an overseas laboratory used by a private physician which was positive for the mosquito transmitted disease.
So far results have been received from 110 cases with 41 positive cases 4 that were inconclusive the rest were negative. There are still 24 results pending.
Of the 41 confirmed cases, 12 have reported a travel history to endemic countries and 29 had no travel history which means they picked up the disease in Cayman. Most local transmissions have occurred in West Bay where 29 people have caught the disease. Only three people who contracted the disease here were from George Town and the other two were from Bodden Town.
Former civil servant to go it alone in West Bay
(CNS): As the elections race for West Bay begins, the first of what is expected to be many independent candidates not running on the Coalition for Cayman ticket announced his candidacy at a public meeting in the district on Wednesday. Dwene Ebanks, a former civil servant, declared his intention to fight for a seat alone. Running on the slogan of the ‘Power of One’, he said he hopes to give life back to West Bay through strategies for labour, education, community development, nation building and economic development, with a focus on small businesses. Ebanks said voters could not afford to re-elect politicians so “focused on the next election when in office that we lose another generation to crime and hopelessness.”
A certified Business Advisor, Ebanks was Business Development Advisor with the Cayman Islands Department of Commerce & Investment. He has a Diploma in Management Practices from the University College of the Cayman Islands and has worked in the private and public sectors for the past 16 years. His last project with the civil service was to establish the Special Economic Zone Secretariat, which is charged with processing and licensing the companies in that virtual zone.
During his time at the Cayman Islands Investment Bureau he traveled extensively throughout North America, Europe and Bermuda promoting and marketing the Cayman Islands as a jurisdiction of choice for institutional business. He has also worked in the DoT, where he managed the Travel Consultants programme amongst other duties, which also included travelling to “many trade and consumer shows including DEMA and the World Travel Expo”. Ebanks’ also temporarily worked in DoT’s United Kingdom, New York and Miami offices so that he could better understand the country’s overseas operations.
A native of the Cayman Islands, he has been involved with many various community projects, including the year-long Quincentennial celebrations, and leading over 200 plus volunteers for the Cayman Islands hosted Florida Caribbean’s Cruise Association’s Conference (FCCA) in 2007. He has been appointed to sit on public boards/committees including the Labour Tribunal as Chairman and Deputy Chairman, and was appointed by the former governor, Peter Smith, to the Parole Commissioners Board.
Ebanks is the current District Representative for West Bay under the National Hazard Management Agency, where he played a vital role in management of the West Bay Shelter’s operations before, during and after hurricane Ivan. He was also awarded Civil Servant of the Year in 1998, having been in the service just two years at that time. Ebanks describes himself as being trained up to represent his community from when he was a young man of nine years old.
CCMI benefits from plastic bag sales
(CNS): The Central Caribbean Marine Institute (CCMI) has been donated proceeds from the sale of plastic bags from Foster’s Food Fair IGA for the third yearrunning. This year, the proceeds will support the Young Environmental Leadership Course, the Juvenile Nassau Grouper project and the Invasive Lionfish project. The Managing Director of Foster’s Food Fair IGA, Woody Foster expressed his support for CCMI, saying, “Making a difference in the lives of young people and helping to protect the environment are very important to us here at Foster’s Food Fair, IGA. Therefore, we are more than happy to do our part and donate the sales of our plastic bags.”
Ten Caymanian students will get the opportunity to participate in CCMI’s Young Environmental Leadership Course (YELC), which aims to introduce them to the role of the environment in everyday life, including it’s economic significance. The students spend two weeks at the Little Cayman Research Centre (LCRC) working alongside scientists and researchers, while learning about conservation and marine science. All participants are trained by professionals throughout the course to complete their dive certification up to instructor level.
In addition to dive training, YELC introduces its students to marine conservation theory, the marine environment and tourism, including environmental threats. Each theory class is supported with vocational experience, to enable students to apply what they learn in a practical setting. Local business owners in Little Cayman help YELC students understand how the environment and the community are closely linked. Work experience placements are provided for students on completion of the course.
Early in 2012 juvenile Nassau Groupers were discovered by the CCMI team in shallow lagoons around Little Cayman. These fish are economically and ecologically important, but are listed as endangered. The discovery of juvenile grouper has led to a joint project with the Cayman Islands Department of the Environment intended to describe and map the fish’s habitat preference around Little Cayman.
Since 2011, CCMI and the University of Florida have collaborated to study several aspects of the invasion of the Indo-Pacific Red Lionfish. The Red Lionfish has ‘invaded’ waters throughout the Caribbean, where its presence is thought to threaten the ecological balance of native species in the region. Lionfish culls are carried out weekly in Little Cayman and to minimise numbers. The CCMI hosts an annual lionfish culling tournament, which is open to the public in Grand Cayman. With the support of Foster’s Food Fair IGA and the Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation, native fish surveys and diet analysis will continue through 2013, which will give CCMI scientists a robust dataset with which to draw new conclusions about the impacts of the invasive lionfish in Little Cayman and help them minimize these impacts.
A spokesperson from the CCMI said, “Funding is extremely important to the work that we do at CCMI and without the support of incredible sponsors like Foster’s Food Fair IGA, we would not be able to continue with our long-term research and community projects.”
Ten year permits fail to attract new financial experts
(CNS): Stories that have surfaced on the worldwide web suggesting that the ten year permit introduced last year by the former UDP government have attracted1000s of workers in the financial services sector to Cayman are completely incorrect. The immigration department confirmed that since the new extended permit was introduced, less than five applications have been made. Although work permit figures have increased in 2012, this is mainly on the lower end of the scale. Reports of a surge in financial sector workers flooding to Cayman are exaggerated, with few of the numerous policy changes throughout the life of the former government resulting in much of an increase in senior workers.
The ten year permit was one of several tweaks to the immigration law made by the UDP administration as the former premier, McKeeva Bush, had insisted that it was Cayman’s inflexible work-permit policies that were putting off investors. However, the numerous regulation changes and amendments to the law making it easier for high net worth individuals and people working in the financial services sector to have more security in their immigration status appear to have made very little difference.
The chief immigration officer confirmed that, following the introduction of the ten year permit last year for the funds and reinsurance industries, there has not been much response nor have the permit waivers on support staff for the reinsurance industry been taken up.
“We have seen very few persons take up this option,” said Linda Evans, adding that less than 5 people have applied for permits to the 10 year limit. “I am only aware of one person seeking the waiver of fees for the specific administrative occupations in those industries. Whilst we have seen an increase in work permits overall over the last 12 months, the permits are mainly in the lower skilled jobs which do not attract the 10 year term limit,” she said.
While Bush has persistently pointed to immigration issues as being one of the major barriers to the growth of Cayman’s economy, the former premier did not get around to directly addressing the most pressing problem of the country’s seven year work permit limit for most workers, known commonly as the rollover policy, despite the findings of a review which suggested it should be abolished.
With the interim government now appearing reluctant to make any major moves before the election, the rollover can has effectively been kicked down the road for the next administration to deal with it. The introduction of Term limit Extension Permits took several hundred workers temporarily past their lawful departure point. However, they will expire this October leaving the tourist sector, in particular, facing the possible mass departure again unless the next administration can address the issue in a matter of months.