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BAHAMAS: GBPA and Mercy Corps Launch Grant Programme to Help Local Economy RISE again

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Freeport, GB, 6 December, 2019 – The Bahamas – Micro, small and medium businesses now have access to much-needed funding as they prepare for the upcoming holiday season. The Grand Bahama Port Authority, Limited (GBPA), today, announced the “Restoring Industries and Sustaining Employment (RISE) Initiative, in collaboration with Mercy Corps (MC), a leading global humanitarian and development organization.

The RISE initiative will offer grants to at least 100 qualifying local businesses from across Grand Bahama, which have suffered losses as a direct result of Hurricane Dorian.  Grants up to $10,000 will be offered, with applicants having access to Mercy Corps’ ground-breaking MicroMentor programme, that pairs business owners with mentors in their sector, to help guide them forward.

According to GBPA Director Henry St. George, the RISE initiative comes as a direct result of GBPA’s post-Hurricane Dorian assessment of nearly 2,000 Licensees.

“Our post-Dorian SME assessment revealed some very sobering data. We learned that nearly 70% of licensees were either uninsured or underinsured; 55% suffered significant damage due to flooding, and while 60% of businesses have re-opened, they continue to struggle to acquire new inventory, replace damaged equipment, and operate in this testing environment.”

With this information in hand the GBPA recognised that their licensees needed support to mitigate these challenges, and needed it quickly. “Businesses that remain closed or that have been able to reopen only partially, need an immediate injection of capital. This help will assist the reestablishment of operations for many of them. Mercy Corps is known globally for its post-disaster recovery experience and we are delighted to be leveraging their expertise for this program and proud to be partnering with them on the RISE initiative.” stated St. George.

The RISE initiative will offer these grants over the next six-months, with applications starting from today. A vetting and approval committee comprised of GBPA, Mercy Corps, the GB Chamber of Commerce, and relevant sector specialists, will oversee the application process. Businesses can qualify for a grant of up to $10K based on the size of the company, the number of employees, the business sector, extent of damages, its viability and other factors.

Mercy Corps Country Director for The Bahamas, Pete Sweetnam, noted “Mercy Corps is delighted to be working in collaboration with GBPA on this initiative, to assist with rebuilding of the economy of Grand Bahama, as well as opening up vital employment opportunities. Mercy Corps is bringing its global expertise in the area of re-establishing viable businesses post disaster and making them more resilient. Building back Better. Our MicroMentor programme, which currently has some 69,000 entrepreneurs and 25,000 mentors across nearly 200 countries, promotes collaboration to overcome obstacles to entrepreneurial success, will be a part of the initiative and open to all businesses right across Grand Bahama.

Mercy Corps has brought considerable funding to the RISE initiative, including from the American Red Cross and is continuing to seek additional funding and new partners for it. This will enable even more businesses to restart, rebuild and thrive, bring more employment right across the island of Grand Bahama.”

The GBPA/MC partnership will place emphasis on small business training, inclusive of disaster recovery planning, post-disaster finance and marketing training, and insurance management. Its MicroMentor program for small businesses will provide essential post-recovery guidance to participating businesses for up to a year.

“We have just come through one of the most catastrophic natural disasters in the history of The Bahamas, which dealt a crippling blow to our business community,” said Derek Newbold, GBPA Sr. Manager of Business Development and Invest Grand Bahama.  “It will take unique measures to rebuild, restore and recover what we as a nation have lost.  Our partnership with Mercy Corps is a great start to restoring the small businesses that are the lifeblood of our economy.”

To download a copy of the RISE initiative, grant application please visit riseGBPA.com or visit GBPA HQ to collect a copy of this application.

Release: Grand Bahama Port Authority

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Twist of Timing Shifts Focus in Jonathan Gardiner Case

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The Bahamas, June 26, 2026 – Imagine boarding a plane for another Bahamian island, only for it to crash in U.S. waters during what now appears to have been a remarkable twist of timing.

Jonathan Gardiner’s Election Day flight has dominated headlines for weeks, but Thursday’s decision by a New York federal judge suggests the story may be far bigger than the crash itself.

Gardiner was denied bail after U.S. District Judge Gregory Woods described him as a danger to the community, a significant flight risk and concluded that the government’s evidence is “very strong.”

For many Bahamians, however, the public narrative has remained fixed on the approximately $30,000 recovered after the crash, including an envelope reportedly containing $5,000 intended for an unnamed politician.

Gardiner’s attorneys have argued the cash was legitimate, saying roughly $20,000 had been withdrawn from his business account the day before the flight. They also maintain the prosecution’s case is circumstantial and have argued that his speedy trial rights are being violated.

But prosecutors say the charges stem from a three-year federal investigation into an alleged conspiracy to import cocaine into the United States—not an investigation that began because a plane crashed in Bahamian waters.

That distinction may prove critical.

The crash brought the case into public view, but it may not be what ultimately determines its outcome.

The judge’s ruling raises a question that now deserves greater attention: What evidence from that three-year investigation persuaded a federal judge that the government’s case is “very strong”?

The answer may not lie in the cash recovered after the crash, but in investigative material that has yet to be fully presented in open court.

As the case moves toward trial, Magnetic Media will continue looking beyond the headlines and following the evidence that underpins one of the most closely watched criminal prosecutions involving a Bahamian in recent years.

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He’s Not Dusting Off Yesterday’s Plan… He’s Trying to Rebuild Government  

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By Deandrea Hamilton | Magnetic Media

 

The Bahamas, June 26, 2026 – Just in case you thought Sebastian Bastian, The Bahamas’ first Minister of Innovation and National Development, was about to dust off Vision 2040 and carry on where others left off… think again.

In his maiden Budget Communication on Monday, June 15, Bastian unveiled what amounts to a blueprint to rebuild how the government works.

Not with another glossy vision document.

But with an execution machine.

The clearest indication came when the Minister acknowledged that while Vision 2040 was an important national achievement, it also exposed a weakness.

“So we are changing what we are building. The National Development Plan will no longer be a document we complete and set aside. It will be a living instrument — continuously reviewed, always current, resourced by full-time professionals, and grounded in real data — that shapes how this government, and every government after it, chooses its priorities. A plan is a document. What we are building is an institution.”

It is a remarkable shift in philosophy.

Instead of governments producing national plans every decade, Bastian wants professionals monitoring implementation in real time, measuring progress and ensuring administrations stay focused on delivering what they promised.

To Bastian, national development goes far beyond the roads, airports and buildings Bahamians can see. It also means creating the invisible infrastructure of government — smarter systems, better planning, reliable data, accountability and institutions that survive changes in political administrations.

His speech repeatedly returned to one central idea: government itself has become an obstacle to opportunity.

He described a Family Island entrepreneur waiting weeks or even months for approvals because government systems do not communicate with one another. He spoke of public servants trapped by outdated manual processes instead of serving people. And he highlighted an 18-year-old entering a workforce being reshaped by artificial intelligence before graduation.

As he explained:

“…our job is a practical one: to make government work better, to make The Bahamas easier to do business in, and to make sure our country and our people are ready for what comes next.”

For ordinary Bahamians, he said the objective is simple.

“…a government that is simpler, faster, and far easier to deal with… dealing with your government will get easier, year after year, by design.”

His ministry’s four pillars are ambitious: modernizing government, preparing the nation for artificial intelligence, developing Bahamian talent and driving long-term national development.

Among the initiatives announced were a National Artificial Intelligence Authority, the country’s first AI legislation, a National Digital ID, SmartGov productivity tools for public officers, connected government systems, a National AI Literacy Initiative, an independent National Planning and Development Institute and a Delivery Division dedicated to turning plans into action.

The speech stopped short in one important area.

While Minister Bastian thoroughly explained how government intends to transform itself, he did not establish the measurable targets by which Bahamians can judge whether that transformation is succeeding.

However, he did reveal the next milestone.

Beginning in August, the National Development Plan Secretariat will begin assessing the planning capacity of every ministry and department while establishing a national tracking system before the renewed development plan moves into execution.

With 23 ministries and offices in the Davis administration, Bahamians now have a timeline.

It would not be unreasonable for the public to expect Minister Bastian to return once that assessment is complete with the findings, benchmarks and measurable goals that define success.

After all, the Minister’s own philosophy leaves little room for anything less.

“Delivery does not happen by good intentions — it happens when you build the institutions to carry it: capacity for research and policy thinking; teams dedicated to implementation; structures that demand accountability; systems that measure progress; and continuity that outlives any election cycle.”

If this speech is any indication, Minister Sebastian Bastian is not asking Bahamians to judge him by promises.He is asking to be judged by performance.

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Kemp Road Dog Attack Turns Fatal; Questions Grow Over Long-Standing Complaints  

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The Bahamas, June 22, 2026 – What began as a shocking dog attack in Nassau’s Kemp Road community has now become a tragedy.

The 66-year-old man who was hospitalized after being mauled by a pack of dogs has died from his injuries, prompting renewed calls for action on what residents say has been a long-standing problem of stray and dangerous dogs in the area.

In the immediate aftermath of the attack, Free Town Member of Parliament Lincoln Deal II described the incident as deeply troubling and revealed that residents had repeatedly voiced concerns about packs of dogs roaming the community.

“For some time, residents have expressed concerns about packs of stray and dangerous dogs in the area and the risk they pose to the public, particularly children and senior citizens,” Deal said at the time.

The MP warned that the attack underscored the urgency of addressing those concerns before another serious incident occurred.

Today, with the victim’s death confirmed, those remarks carry even greater weight.

Deal said he had spoken with the victim’s family following the attack and pledged to engage the relevant authorities to determine what immediate steps could be taken to improve public safety in the affected area.

The incident has also reignited concerns about responsible pet ownership, enforcement of animal control regulations and the management of stray animals in residential communities.

While investigations continue, many residents are asking whether the fatal attack could have been prevented had earlier complaints been addressed more aggressively.

The tragedy has drawn widespread sympathy across New Providence and renewed discussion about the dangers posed by uncontrolled dogs, particularly to elderly residents and children.

For many in Kemp Road, the loss of a community member has transformed what was once viewed as a neighbourhood nuisance into a matter of life and death.

Authorities have not yet released additional details regarding the circumstances surrounding the attack or any actions that may be taken against the owners of the dogs involved.

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