#NASSAU, The Bahamas – February 26, 2020 — Interpersonal and communication skills and preparation for certifications and internships are among the essentials that teachers must impress upon students in Family and Consumer Science said Keyshan Bastian, Assistant Director of Education, Career and Technical Education Section.
“Your degree does not make you qualified. Your experience speaks to what you are able to do and the lifelong field that you develop. It doesn’t matter if you have a Masters’ Degree or PH.D. If you’ve never been in industry, you’re still coming in as a junior,” said Mrs. Bastian.
Simmone Bowe, Director, Human Resources, Ministry of Tourism, addresses educators during a panel discussion put on during Family and Consumer Science Education Unit Spring 2020 Professional Development Workshop. Seated from left is Martysta Turnquest, Outreach Specialist, BahaMar; Ricardo Ramos, Global Organization Program Director, Air BnB; Suzanne Pattusch, Executive Vice President, Bahamas Hotel & Tourism Association; Keyshan Bastian, Assistant Director of Education and Gadville McDonald, Executive Director, NTA. Other participants in the panel discussion are pictured seated. (BIS Photographer/Patrick Hanna)
“If they’re coming in to make beds, let them spend a day making beds. If they’re coming in to work the front office, let them spend a day working front of office.”
Mrs. Bastian was among a panel of industry professionals who participated in a discussion during Family and Consumer Science Education Unit Spring 2020 Professional Development Workshop put on by the Department of Education for public and private junior and senior high school teachers. The theme for the workshop was ‘Curriculum Implementation: Transitioning Students from School to Work and Beyond’.
She urged the teachers to be monitors and coaches, and to network with industry.
“We need our children to be coached into what we want them to be. They don’t leave high school as high school students, come to industry and be where they are, but if we have a relationship that’s on-going we are allowing them the opportunity to develop the kind of experiences they need.
“We want industry to tell us more of what it is you want them to come out with so we can push them in that direction. Collaboratively, we want to prepare the kind of students so industry is running, fighting to get them with joint partnerships,” she said.
Furthermore, Mrs. Bastian appealed to industry professionals to invest in teachers.
“You can only take students as far as you’ve been. You can talk about the experience because you’ve been a part of the experience. Whatever we want to see in our students we’ve provided the opportunity whether it’s through an agency like the National Training Agency (NTA) or the American Hotel and Lodging Educational Institute.
2020 Atlantic Hurricane Storm Names
Providing an overview of NTA, Gadville McDonald, Executive Director, said it is a competency based training organization that focuses on workforce development.
He said NTA partners with training providers and industry leaders to ensure that individuals are properly trained and prepared to contribute to the industry on day one.
“We make sure they have NTA certificates at the end of completion but we [also] make sure they have international certification,” said Mr. McDonald.
“We’ve trained 600-850 students annually — who have not successfully completed high school and are not necessarily prepared for the workforce. We take them through 4 weeks of mandatory workforce preparation, ensure attitude and mindset are right – for the most part that is the number one challenge in our country.
“We’ve been successful over the last 5 years of training over 6,000 young Bahamians. More than 40% of them every year choose the hospitality industry,” said Mr. McDonald.
The panel also comprised industry professionals including Simmone Bowe, Director, Human Resources, Ministry of Tourism; Martysta Turnquest, Outreach Specialist, BahaMar; Suzanne Pattusch, Executive Vice President, Bahamas Hotel & Tourism Association and Ricardo Ramos, Global Organization Program Director, Air BnB.
Representatives from the American Hotel and Lodging Educational Institute and the National Restaurant Association participated in the two-day event held at C. C. Sweeting Senior High School.
Magnetic Media is a Telly Award winning multi-media company specializing in creating compelling and socially uplifting TV and Radio broadcast programming as a means for advertising and public relations exposure for its clients.
NASSAU, Bahamas — What should be a simple five-minute drive is fast becoming an expensive, hour-long ordeal, as rising fuel prices collide with worsening traffic congestion across New Providence.
As of early April 2026, gasoline prices across The Bahamas have climbed sharply, with motorists now paying an estimated $5.50 to over $6.50 per gallon, depending on the station and grade. The increases, seen at major retailers including Esso, Rubis and Shell, reflect a volatile global oil market driven by escalating geopolitical tensions.
The latest spike — in some cases jumping more than 50 cents per gallon within days — is being driven by uncertainty surrounding escalating tensions involving Iran. U.S. President Donald Trump has issued a direct ultimatum, warning that the United States could launch aggressive strikes on Iranian infrastructure, including power plants and key facilities, if demands are not met. While he has also expressed hope for a swift resolution, the threat of rapid escalation is already rattling global oil markets — and The Bahamas, heavily dependent on imported fuel, is feeling the impact almost immediately.
At the pumps, the frustration is real.
Drivers are now paying significantly more just to sit in traffic. Commutes that once took minutes are stretching into hour-long crawls, burning fuel with little movement and compounding the financial strain. For many residents, the issue isn’t just the price per gallon — it’s how quickly that gallon disappears.
Industry players are also bracing for impact. Higher diesel prices are expected to ripple across key sectors, including trucking, construction, and shipping — all of which ultimately feed into the cost of goods and services. In short, this is not just a fuel story; it’s an inflation story in the making.
Despite the surge, the Bahamas Petroleum Retailers Association has moved to calm fears, confirming that there is no fuel shortage. Supply remains stable, but consumers are being urged to adjust behavior — from maintaining proper tyre pressure to considering carpooling — small measures that could stretch every dollar a bit further.
Retailers, however, are not offering much comfort on price relief. While fluctuations are expected, insiders say the days of sudden price drops are unlikely in the immediate term. The “shock” increases may level off, but a meaningful decline hinges on global stability — something that currently feels out of reach.
For Bahamians, the reality is tightening: higher fuel costs, longer commutes, and a growing sense that relief isn’t coming anytime soon.
Angle by Deandrea Hamilton. Built with ChatGPT (AI). Magnetic Media — CAPTURING LIFE.
NASSAU, Bahamas — The Free National Movement has rolled out details of its proposed $200 monthly Working Parent Child Support Initiative, but the announcement has already ignited political debate and prompted clarification from the party.
Leader Michael Pintard said the initiative would provide $200 per month to qualifying caregivers during the first two years of a child’s life, as part of a broader push to ease the cost of living for Bahamian families.
The party estimates the programme would cost between $12 million and $14 million annually, with funding to come from reducing what it describes as excessive government spending — particularly consultancy contracts.
However, the proposal quickly drew scrutiny.
The governing Progressive Liberal Party has challenged the feasibility of the plan, questioning how the payments would be sustained without increasing the deficit or introducing new taxes. The response forced the FNM to further outline its funding strategy, emphasizing that a 21 percent reduction in consultancy spending could fully finance the initiative.
The exchange has highlighted a familiar election-season tension — bold proposals versus practical execution.
Beyond the child support plan, Pintard outlined a wide-ranging policy agenda, including:
Removing VAT on select essential goods
Constructing 5,000 affordable homes within five years
Cutting the country’s food import bill by half
Strengthening enforcement against illegal immigration
Reforming the nation’s healthcare system
Pintard also took aim at the current administration, accusing it of mismanaging public funds and awarding more than $400 million in contracts without competitive bidding — claims which have further fueled political back-and-forth.
“The best way to pay for high-quality public services in the long run is to have a strong, efficient economy,” Pintard said, arguing that government spending must be redirected toward ordinary Bahamians.
While supporters have welcomed the proposals as timely relief for struggling families, critics remain cautious, pointing to unanswered questions around implementation, eligibility, and long-term sustainability.
With election momentum building, the debate surrounding the FNM’s plan underscores a broader reality — Bahamians are being presented with big promises, but increasingly demanding clear answers on how those promises will be delivered.
Angle by Deandrea Hamilton. Built with ChatGPT (AI). Magnetic Media — CAPTURING LIFE.
NASSAU, Bahamas — The Coalition of Independents has rolled out its First 100 Days Plan, positioning it as a roadmap for rapid national transformation and a clear break from what it describes as the failures of the country’s two dominant political parties.
Leader Lincoln Bain introduced the plan during a recent public presentation, outlining a series of early actions his party says would be implemented immediately upon taking office.
At the heart of the proposal is a push to redistribute access to Crown land, a signature policy of the Coalition, which argues that Bahamians should have greater direct benefit from national resources. The plan also prioritizes the full implementation of Freedom of Information legislation, with Bain framing transparency as a cornerstone of restoring trust in government.
Additional focus areas include proposed reforms to the healthcare system, including improved compensation for nurses and medical professionals, and broader governance changes aimed at increasing accountability and reducing political control over national decision-making.
The Coalition has branded the plan as a historic first, describing itself as the only political group to present a structured 100-day agenda ahead of a general election.
But beyond the policy points, the messaging was unmistakable.
Bain and his team continue to urge Bahamians to move away from the traditional two-party system, arguing that both the Progressive Liberal Party and the Free National Movement have failed to deliver meaningful change despite decades of governance.
“The system is not working for the people,” has been a consistent refrain from the Coalition, which is campaigning on the idea of resetting how the country is governed.
While supporters view the 100-day plan as a bold and necessary shift, questions remain about the level of detail provided, particularly around costing, timelines, and how proposed changes would be executed within the existing structure of government.
Still, the rollout signals that the Coalition of Independents is seeking to position itself not just as an alternative voice, but as a ready governing option — one promising immediate action and systemic reform.
With election momentum building, the emergence of a defined 100-day agenda adds a new dimension to the political landscape, as Bahamians weigh competing visions for the country’s future.
Angle by Deandrea Hamilton. Built with ChatGPT (AI). Magnetic Media — CAPTURING LIFE.