#Kingston, August 18, 2019 – Jamaica – A total of 162,654 children who are registered with the Programme of Advancement Through Health and Education (PATH) will benefit from the Ministry of Labour and Social Security’s Back-to-School grant programme.
The
Ministry will be disbursing $569.289 million to several PATH families, with
each student set to receive $3,500 during the month of August. The benefit is payable to all registered PATH
students attending primary and secondary schools islandwide.
Introduced
in September 2018, the initiative is part of efforts by the Government to
improve social safety net programmes and to increase the level of support
provided to poor families.
At the
handover of cheques to some beneficiaries on Friday (August 16) at the Ministry,
in Kingston, Portfolio Minister, Hon. Shahine Robinson, said the decision was
made to make the grant programme an annual initiative, to ease the burden of
expenses associated with back-to-school preparations.
“With
all the challenges with back-to-school (preparations) and just living, I think
that PATH is doing a good thing. As a
representative of the people, I know the challenges that parents face with
these enormous book lists and every year they get more expensive, so any little
help to take you over the hill, I know, will be appreciated,” the Minister
said.
Describing
PATH as an “investment” in the country’s youth, Mrs. Robinson encouraged the
parents and guardians present to ensure that children attend school every day.
“Time
lost cannot be regained and it is important that this is impressed upon the
children. The only way you can escape
poverty is through education. Successive governments realise that we must
invest in education. We must invest in our children,” she said.
Eighty-four
year-old Raphael Case, who collected cheques for his grandchildren, said he is
grateful for this assistance, as the grant will help in purchasing books,
uniforms and stationery for the children who are enrolled in primary and
secondary institutions.
Mother of
six, Suzanne Dawkins, said she is grateful for the assistance which will go a
far way in offsetting back-to-school expenses.
“I feel
nice this morning when I opened the cheque. I felt good. Just this morning I
walked down to the bookstore and I saw that the price for one of the books is $4,000.
I didn’t know where the money would come from,” she said.
Ms. Dawkins
said she has been telling others about the programme, which has provided
invaluable assistance in her children’s education.
“I have
been trying to tell others about it. There are children out there only going to
school three days for the week and I’m telling the mothers to register their children
with the PATH, because it will help them to go through school,” she told JIS
News.
Contact: Rochelle Williams
Release: JIS