Friday, March 13, 2015
By SANCHESKA BROWN
Tribune Staff Reporter
sbrown@tribunemedia.net
UNLESS the government revokes its “silly, unenforceable” immigration policy school administrators will be faced with “thousands of angry and frustrated Bahamian parents” during public school registration next week, former Education Minister Desmond Bannister said.
Mr Bannister, who is also a former FNM senator, said the government has once again “dropped the ball”. He said a minimal amount of research would have “led any sensible person to reconsider such an unworkable policy to the detriment of Bahamian parents”.
He was responding to a new immigration policy that requires every foreign person enrolled in school, even children born in the Bahamas to non-Bahamian parents, to have a student permit and a passport with a residency stamp.
“Of the approximately 50,000 Bahamian students in our school system, a relative small minority are in possession of passports,” he said in a press statement.
“If we optimistically conclude that 50 per cent of them have passports, that still leaves 25,000 students without passports. Those students will appear at school to register armed with their Bahamian birth certificates. The problem: Bahamian birth certificates do not indicate the child’s citizenship.”
He said birth certificates only state where a child was born and where his or her parents reside.
“They do not tell us the citizenship of the parents or the child. The government will have, therefore, not done anything to combat the problem that they seek to alleviate. Unless the government quickly revokes their silly, unenforceable policy, our school administrators will be faced with thousands of angry and frustrated Bahamian parents.”
He said it is not too late to revoke the “poorly considered policy”, adding that it will save children, parents and administrators anguish and frustration.
“Reconsider the policy and take time to implement sensible, workable rules so that the registration process will remain workable and efficient,” Mr Bannister added.
Registration for the fall semester begins on Monday.
Last week, Education Director Lionel Sands told The Tribune that students who do not meet the new immigration requirements for the fall semester will have until the end of December to produce the required documents before the Immigration Department intervenes.
He said it is not his department’s intent to “remove any children from school”, but if the deadline passes without a reasonable excuse, the matter will be passed on to the Department of Immigration.
Mr Sands said all compulsory school aged students – between five and 16 years old – will be required to possess either a Bahamian passport, a birth certificate indicating a mother or father as a Bahamian citizen or a permit authorising the child to reside in The Bahamas.
A press release from the Ministry of Education said along with those documents “students will continue to submit the standard registration information to the principal of the school, for the purposes of registration and entry”.
According to the release, students who do not possess the required documentation for registration will be given a provisional letter of acceptance by the school, which will remain valid until December 31, 2015. Students will have until this date to obtain and submit the required documentation and information.
Comments
birdiestrachan says...
Banister has never ever had a sensible idea in his head. All he can talk about is, what is silly. It is a good idea for the students to have passports. and I am sure the person at the schools are intelligent enough to deal with the situation, in spite of what Mr: Banister has to say.
Posted 13 March 2015, 5:35 p.m. Suggest removal
ispeakthetruth says...
I think it's chaotic that so many are in the Bahamas without government issued documents. I am fine with frustrated parents, as long as they comply with this simple rule.
If legal, it is not that hard to get a passport for their child. I got my passport renewed within four weeks. These parents have almost ten months to get their children's passports. If not, one of the two parents can use their own birth certificates to prove their child's status, as this is also accepted. If they cannot produce either of these items, then maybe they are illegal. Thus, the policy has achieved its goal. Sounds thought out to me.
Posted 13 March 2015, 7:15 p.m. Suggest removal
SP says...
Desmond Bannister is a casualty of Hubert Ingrahams 5 years of unchallenged stupidity.
**Nuff Said.**
Posted 13 March 2015, 8:09 p.m. Suggest removal
Girly says...
Why is he saying this policy is "silly". Wouldn't it be common sense for every parent to go through the process and ensure that their child has a passport and please don't tell me this is rushed because some of these children are 5,6,7,8 years old etc. As parents we can sometimes be too lazy in doing things that are very important to the well being of our children.These documents shouldn't just be necessary for school but just in case there is a health emergency and the child needs to be taken away to another country for further care.
Posted 15 March 2015, 3:02 p.m. Suggest removal
sansoucireader says...
My daughters got their first passports when they were newborns. Go down to the Passport Office and you will see many parents waiting in line with their newborns, toddlers and small children. Bahamians like having a passport, so I don't know what foolishness he is talking about. Guess he didn't wait on line for his. Hhmmmm.
Posted 15 March 2015, 3:11 p.m. Suggest removal
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