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FortisTCI Trains Over 100 Contractors and Their Workers in Environmental Health & Safety Standards

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Contractor Monroe Forbes of 4M Construction (right) receives his ‘Safety Passport’. 

#Providenciales, August 21, 2019 – Turks and Caicos Islands –FortisTCI recently trained 106 contractors and key members of their staff across the Turks and Caicos Islands in a series of Environmental Health and Safety (EHS) workshops. The training seminars ensure that contractors working with FortisTCI understand and comply with the company’s Environmental Health and Safety Management Systems (EHSMS).

Participants completed various courses in CPR and First Aid, incident and accident reporting, working in confined spaces, working at heights, forklift operations, spill control, energy control procedures, fire extinguisher use, waste management, security control, business continuity management, housekeeping, waste management, and ethics. Contractors who completed the training were awarded a ‘Safety Passport,’ which gives them the approval to work on FortisTCI jobsites.

Training workshops were held on Providenciales on June 25 and 27 and again from July 16 to 17 for 72 contractors. Training sessions on the sister islands were held thereafter on July 19 and 22 on South Caicos for nine contractors, on Grand Turk from July 25 to 26 for 15 contractors, and on North Caicos from July 29 to 30 for 10 contractors.

The EHS Department and members of senior management at FortisTCI led the series of training sessions. Instructors included Vice President for Grand Turk and Sister Islands Allan Robinson, Grand Turk Operations Manager Neil Allen, Senior Project Engineering Consultant Michael Polonio, Senior Director of Financial Operations Catherine Munsayac, Director of EHS and Line Operations Dave Laing, Director of Plant Control Alvejes Desir, Manager of ISO Management Systems and Business Continuity Sharon Alli-Jose, Manager of EHS Marcus Francis, Senior EHS Coordinator Eustace Musgrove, and Work Methods Specialist Walter Wilson.

FortisTCI President and CEO Eddinton Powell said, “Environmental Health and Safety (EHS) is paramount at FortisTCI. There is no greater commitment we must have to work in the electricity industry. Thanks to the work of our EHS Department and the commitment of our employees and business partners, we live a health and safety culture that is a part of everything we do. Our commitment to training and education in this area and the policies we have established is a further pledge to operating with excellence in the Turks and Caicos Islands. Our focus on health and safety extends beyond our doors at FortisTCI, and I commend and congratulate all participants who completed the recent EHS workshops.

Left photo: Contractor Evan Harvey (right) is presented his ‘Safety Passport’.

“Contractor and workshop participant Oneal Delancy spoke about his experience and said, “FortisTCI is making an important contribution in providing EHS training for contractors, who can improve their work methods not only while working with the company but can use this knowledge for the benefit of their own business and their employees. Ultimately, this training will have a lasting value for local business and the construction section.” Also speaking about the training, contractor Henry Handfield said, “The training was very informative and a great help to us. I am revisiting projects that I have done in the past and implementing the new things I have learnt.”

FortisTCI operates within international best practices and is an ISO 14001:2015, 45001:2018, and 22301:2012 certified company.

Release: FortisTCI

Photo Caption:

Header: Contractors in Grand Turk taking part in the EHS training seminar work together on an exercise to identify safety hazards.

A group of contractors in Provo talks about job safety planning during the FortisTCI EHS training seminar.

 

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Government

Sixth UK Overseas Territories Forum on the Oversight of Public Finances and Good Governance, held in Westminster 10-12 September 2024

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United Kingdom, September 13, 2024 – A delegation from the Turks and Caicos Islands will visit the UK Parliament for the Good Governance and Public Finance Forum.

This week, delegates from the Turks and Caicos Islands are among 39 Overseas Territories representatives attending the Sixth UK Overseas Territories Forum on Good Governance and Oversight of Public Finance, hosted in the UK Parliament and UK National Audit Office.

The Turks and Caicos Islands’ delegation includes members of the House of Assembly and National Audit Office. Held between 10 – 12 September 2024, the UK Overseas Territories Forum on Good Governance and Oversight of Public Finances is an important event for many parliamentarians, parliamentary officials, and government auditors across Anguilla, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Falkland Islands, Gibraltar, Montserrat, St Helena, and the Turks and Caicos Islands.

As the flagship annual conference, focused on enhancing good governance and oversight of public finance, the Forum stands as an important opportunity for parliamentarians, officials, and auditors alike to meet and share best practices.

Sarah Dickson OBE, Chief Executive of CPA UK, said: “Over the past eight years, the UK Overseas Territories Project has brought together people from across the Overseas Territories, the UK, and the Crown Dependencies to share good practice and exchange ideas. The Forum in London will be a great opportunity to strengthen the existing networks and partnerships across the Overseas Territories and build new ones.”

Hon. Gordon J. Burton, MHA, Speaker of the House of Assembly, said: “The CPA UK has been an invaluable partner to the House of Assembly for many years by providing training opportunities to members and by conducting post-election seminars through the UKOTP. This seminar is a continuation of that collaboration which strengthens our members ability to carry out their duties as members of the oversight committees of the House.”

The Forum is hosted by the UK Branch of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association, the UK Government Internal Audit Agency, and the UK National Audit Office.

Since 2016, the three organisations have worked with the authorities in the British Overseas Territories to deliver training, spaces to share knowledge learnt and insights gained, as well as opportunities for professionals to visit their counterparts overseas.

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News

Baby left on doorstep in Dock Yard explained by Authorities

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Wilkie Arthur and Deandrea Hamilton

 

 

Turks and Caicos, September 13, 2024 – A barking dog is what drew attention to the baby left abandoned on a couple’s front porch in Kew Town, Providenciales on the morning of Tuesday September 3.

Discovered by a husband and wife, they reported to Eagle Legal News Media that they emerged from their residence to see what was going on, and were stunned to discover a most unexpected cause for the fuss; a baby boy, clad only in diapers, sitting outside on their porch.

“…it left me wondering and baffled as to how or what could have gotten into a mother and/or possibly a father to just abandon their baby on a total stranger’s porch…” said Wilkie Arthur, who picked up on the story and spoke to those involved in the sensitive case.

The Safeguarding and Public Protection Unit of the Royal TCI Police Force was immediately called in to investigate the peculiar matter.  It was described as emotional by an officer who opted to speak off the record, but candidly about the rare situation.

“Speaking to a female officer, whom we can’t name, due to the sensitivity and confidentiality of this case, she stated this was the most painful incident she’s ever heard of in all her years serving as an officer.”

It broke her down to tears informed the news blast which went out early on the morning of Wednesday September 4.

Communication with the TCI Police revealed that: “On Tuesday, 3rd September, the police responded to a report from a resident in the Dock Yard area of Providenciales that a child was found alone on their porch.

Officers responded to the address where a male child, approximately one-year-old, was found in the resident’s custody. Officers transported the child to the police station, and the Safeguarding and Public Protection Unit of the RT&CIPF and the Department of Social Development were informed.

Enquiries commenced, and investigations revealed that the child had been left in the care of an elderly relative who had fallen asleep. The child managed to unlock a door and wandered off.

Given the circumstances, the relative was given a stern warning by officers.”

Residents of Dock Yard in Kew Town were in a state of shock over the situation.  Initially no one had claimed the child.  As stated by police, the child has since been reunited with his family.

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News

Coroner decision; Brother dead after alleged sexual assault of sister

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Wilkie Arthur

Eagle Legal News Media

 

 

Turks and Caicos, September 13, 2024 – In case one, allegations of a brother, of Dominican descent, raping his own sister and then hanging himself. In case two, allegations of another and known Dominican man after being deported or repatriated returns to the Turks and Caicos as a stow away and allegedly drowns.

Eagle Legal Court Correspondent was in the Coroner’s Court for the past two weeks when various different coronial matters were called.

The learned Coroner delivered her final decision on the two coronial matters mentioned above.

We will report on case number #1, “Allegations of brother raping sister, then killing himself.”

GABRIEL ESMIL DURAN, lived in Dock Yard, Kew Town, Providenciales. He was born in 1976 and allegedly hung himself in November 2021.  His sister, whose initials are A V D, gave police a statement of her brother raping her about 12 hours before being found hanging with a rope around his neck.

The Hon Coroner relied on that statement to help aid her in her decision.

The sister said, her brother was drinking earlier that day, and after the sexual assault she ran out of the house and hid herself in the bushes until the morning.  It was said that she told someone about the sexual assault.  She said around 9pm she checked the door, it was locked, but in the morning the door was unlocked. The Coroner said there was no evidence of anyone entering the property, but one of her concerns was how the door got unlocked.

There was also information or evidence about his partner catching Covid-19 in the Dominican Republic, and that possibly weighed heavily on him.

Due to insufficient evidence surrounding the “police provisional suicide death” of Gabriel Esmil Duran, the learned Coroner did not reach the conclusion that this was a suicide death and her decision in the coronial matter was an “OPEN CONCLUSION”, which means if any further evidence was to ever come forward in this particular case, the coroner could reopen it.

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