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Attractive Pay as Premier aims to Staff Delivery Unit 

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By Dana Malcolm  

Staff Writer  

 

 

#TurksandCaicos, March 23, 2023 – The Government is actively working to staff the promised Premier’s Delivery Unit, being established to streamline government projects and ensure efficient use of government funds; it is also expected to ensure timelines are adhered to; overall making the Government a more efficient machine.  

Washington Misick, TCI Premier, opened applications again in early March for top positions including Head of the PDU, with a promised salary starting at $ 120,000 per year.  Project Leads are also wanted and will be handed a $62,000 per year income and finally, an analyst is still outstanding. The Government hopes to catch one with a promise of $54,000 per year. 

Launched in July last year, the project with a Budget allocation of $2.5 million was to be staffed locally eventually, and maneuvered so proficiently, it would revolutionise the way the Government does business beginning with 10 priority projects.

The irony is the Unit itself faced human resource setbacks, stalling its activation. 

Misick had listed the ten projects, which encompass tackling critical infrastructure and communication issues; these were cited in his 2022 Throne Speech. They included: The new Fibre Optic Cable Link, South Dock Port Redevelopment, Solid Waste Management, Comprehensive Housing Development Framework, Digitisation of the Land Registry, Management & Containment of Informal Settlements, Digitisation of Border Services Agriculture and Food Security and National ID and a New Providenciales Court Complex. 

All of these projects have seen some level of implementation and Premier Misick had said the DPU has detailed plans with start and completion dates and staffing for the various stages of each project. 

Still the need for a fully functioning DPU cannot be understated.  

Members on both sides of the House of Assembly including Akierra Missick and Alvin Garland, have now been on record about the snail’s pace of Government projects approved for the advancement of the islands.   

The DPU, when properly staffed, is supposed to sit in the ‘centre’ of Government as ‘an active partner to ministries, departments and other Government bodies,’ to end the recurring trend.   

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RTCIPF Observes World Down Syndrome Day

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On March 21st, 2024, the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force joined the international, regional and local communities in observing World Down Syndrome Day. 

Officers showed their support by wearing brightly coloured and mismatched socks to raise awareness. 

The head of the Safeguarding and Public Protection Unit, Assistant Superintendent of Police Grantley Williams, Training Manager Mrs Odessa Forbes and Media Relations Officer Denyse Renne visited the SNAP Centre and interacted with the students.

In a message to the TCI community, the RTCIPF noted that stereotypes perpetuate stigma and hinder inclusion, preventing individuals from reaching their full potential. 

Instead, the RTCIPF calls for individuals to foster an environment of acceptance and support where everyone is valued for who they are. 

By breaking down barriers and challenging misconceptions, we can create a more inclusive society where individuals with Down Syndrome are empowered to live fulfilling lives and contribute meaningfully to their communities and, by extension, the TCI. 

As law enforcement officers, we must protect and serve all members of society, regardless of their abilities. 

Let’s work together to ensure that individuals with Down Syndrome are treated with dignity and respect and that their rights are upheld.

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CARICOM speaks out on Climate Change, looking to May meeting to amplify call for Climate Funding

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March 3, 2024

 

The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) remains on the frontlines of global climate crisis, an issue the Region has been aggressively advocating on for the past thirty years. Despite the many commitments and promises of international partners, the window of opportunity to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels is rapidly closing.

Heads of Government are concerned that while COP 28 was widely regarded as a historic event, with the completion of the first global stocktake (GST), on progress in achievement of the Paris Agreement goals, the outcomes of GST show that emissions of greenhouse gases continue to rise and the nationally determined contributions (NDCs) of Parties will not keep global temperatures below the 1.5 degree goal enshrined in the Paris Agreement.

Heads of Government also expressed concern to be heading to COP 29 where a New Finance Goal will be articulated to replace the 100bn goal, which has not yet been met, even as developing countries require trillions to deal with the escalating impacts of climate change. Developed country parties have not provided enough finance at scale, technology and capacity building support required to help developing countries tackle their pressing needs to build their resilience, especially in adapting to the adverse and increasingly catastrophic impacts of climate change. The clear absence of definitive timelines for action and quantitative commitments for scaling up of investments, and particularly adaptation finance emerging out of COP 28, cause great concern to our Region.

The Conference noted that Small Island Developing States (SIDS), recognized as the most vulnerable group of countries and a special case for sustainable development, have been facing strong push back against the recognition of their special circumstances especially in the context of climate finance. There is limited international support for special allocations for SIDS within financing arrangements and available climate finance from international and private sources is limited, expensive and too onerous to access.

In light of the preceding, Heads of Government called for CARICOM to take a strategic, unified and coordinated approach to ensure that the Region remains influential in the climate and development arena through engagements with key partners and advocacy groups.

They called for renewed focus by the Region to advocate for inclusion of forests, nature-based solutions and blue carbon into market mechanisms with the aim of articulating clear regional positions and strategies.

Heads of Government reiterated the call for improved readiness programmes, simplified approval procedures, a change to the criteria for determining access to low-cost finance, and for the adoption of programmatic approaches to address the bottlenecks in accessing finance.

The Region reiterates its support for the Bridgetown Initiative’s call to expand capital adequacy of international financial institutions.

Heads recognized that the Fourth International Conference on Small Island Developing States, scheduled to be held in Antigua and Barbuda, 27 – 30 May 2024, will be an inflection point for many of these discussions to be articulated. As such, the Region remains committed to participating in the Conference at the highest level.

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South Caicos Development Plans shared with Washington-Misick led Administration

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On Monday, 12 February 2024, the Premier led a delegation to tour the island of South Caicos to view the ongoing public and private sector projects, involving the remodelling and rebranding of the airport terminals, historical districts, and the East Bay Hotel.

The tour of the various developments reinforced the Government’s commitment to collaborating with stakeholders to boost the island’s activity and economy.

Photos courtesy of the TCI Office of the Premier

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