Wednesday, October 2, 2019
By RASHAD ROLLE
Tribune Staff Reporter
rrolle@tribunemedia.net
THE overall cost of lump sum payments to public servants affected by Hurricane Dorian will be about $18m, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Peter Turnquest said yesterday.
He told reporters outside Cabinet: "The final cost is still outstanding, however, as we have to consider relocation allowances and rental accommodations for persons displaced and assigned outside of those districts."
Last week the government announced it will give $1,000 lump sum payments to public servants affected by Hurricane Dorian and a relocation payment of $2,600 to those in need.
The hurricane destruction has prompted government to stress the need for specially designed hurricane shelters capable of housing hundreds, if not thousands of people. Mr Turnquest said this is a long-term focus of the administration and suggested funds for this will not be allocated soon.
"We're going to have to have a short and a long-term strategy with respect to the provision of adequate, safe shelters," he said.
"We've seen that some of the properties that we've used as shelters have themselves become compromised during storms because they're not necessarily built to be used as shelters.
"They're strong buildings in the context of our building codes, but still not proper bunkers that we need to now consider as storms are getting stronger and more frequent. The maintenance on these buildings needs to be ongoing to ensure that they're always ready in the event that there is a storm.
"The design of such a structure in these various communities is the first step which will dictate what the cost is going to be to construct these multi-purpose shelters and how they will be stocked and provisioned in anticipation of storm season.
"This is not going to be a short-term solution or project, this is going to be an issue that is going to take some strategic vision and execution. So the short answer is I don't think it will be an overnight project, but certainly something that we have to look towards as these storms become more frequent and strong, including the increase in the storm surges that we're seeing."
Mr Turnquest also said the budget for the new Ministry of Disaster Preparedness is still being formulated. The ministry, headed by Central Grand Bahama MP Iram Lewis, is operating with money allocated to the Office of the Prime Minister.
"We may not have the full, complete budget before the mid-term and we'll come back to lay out the cost and the plan going forward in terms of how this whole event with reprioritise the government's finances," Mr Turnquest said.
He also revealed that it will cost around $25m to get a new engine required for Bahamas Power and Light's Baillou Hills plant.
"Hopefully that can get here very quickly and we can start to shave off some of the problems," he said.
Comments
Ton_Heijnmans says...
Check the threads on these local town-councillor caste.
The 《**club** of Forty》 Coats.
With a bevelled handle to-boot.
All's the better for whacking'm
.... 'baç' into line.
Well done mister Mini Star.
Take care of the voter-base first.
That above all.
Posted 3 October 2019, 12:02 a.m. Suggest removal
Well_mudda_take_sic says...
What the flipping hell gives the government the right to pay government employees such a benefit to the exclusion of all other Bahamians (taxpayers) who have also suffered great damage to their property as a result of Hurricane Dorian???!!!
These government employees are still employed and being paid by government. There are many Bahamians in the private sector who have lost everything, including their jobs. What the Minnis-led FNM government has done here is fundamentally wrong and wreaks of unconstitutional favouratism of 'their own' at the expense of all other taxpayers. And to think our daft PM and his equally daft Minister of Finance are justifying these wrongful benefit payments by saying "the PLP did it in the past, so we can do it too!"
Yes indeed, ONE-AND-DONE!!!!
Posted 3 October 2019, 1:22 p.m. Suggest removal
Well_mudda_take_sic says...
This $18 million should have been spent on expeditiously rounding up, detaining and then deporting the many thousands of illegal Haitian aliens back to Haiti.
When is Minnis going to stop wagging his lips and start enforcing our immgration laws?
Why have their been no deportations?
Why has Turnquest been so **willing** to annually budget many many millions of dollars to accommodate the very burdensome costs to our society of the thousands and thousands of illegal Haitian aliens in our country?
Why has Turnquest been so **unwilling** to annually budget sufficient funds to properly enforce our immigration laws, including adequate funds for the ongoing protection of our borders and the conduct of a sustained program of periodically rounding up, detaining and expeditiously deporting the many thousands of illegal Haitian aliens back to Haiti?
The vast majority of 'true' Bahamians want no more lip service - just action!
Posted 3 October 2019, 2:26 p.m. Suggest removal
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