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PM promises wage increase

Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley is promising a wage increase to public servants should the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) be returned to office in the February 11 General Election.

She said that group had been benefiting from increases since the BLP was elected in 2018.

Mottley was addressing a public meeting in Layne’s Road, Brittons Hill, St Michael, on Thursday night in support of candidates Kirk Humphrey in St Michael South, Marsha Caddle in St Michael South Central and William Duguid in Christ Church West. Parts of the Brittons Hill district fall into the three constituencies.

The Prime Minister said that in spite of the COVID-19 pandemic which shut down the country beginning in 2020, and Barbados having two $1 billion structural adjustment programmes, public servants were given two additional wage increases.

“As we speak, we are waiting on the regrading and know that we will have to go for what will be your fourth wage increase before the end of this year should you give us back the Government,” she told the crowd.

She also referenced the appointment of thousands of public servants under her party’s watch, saying that some of the 2 500 from the November/ December period would be getting their confirmation letters this week.

Mottley, the candidate for St Michael North East, said her party was about progressive measures aimed at improving the lives of ordinary Barbadians.

As a result, she pointed out, it had increased the minimum hourly wage rate and gave to families whose principal breadwinner worked in places such as gas stations or shops, the opportunity to take home $713 more monthly working a 40-hour week.

A reverse tax credit was given back to offset the Value Added Tax, along with the expanded VAT-exempted basket of goods, she said.

“Look around in Wildey, look around in The Pine. These are the people who constitute the majority of the beneficiaries of the Labour Party’s policies. What foolishness you telling me that we only see big people. You need big people sometimes to create investment and to create jobs, but if you don’t take care of the people who take care of you, God help you, and that is the problem of the DLP (Democratic Labour Party) for the last 15 years,” Mottley told the gathering.

For those making around $25 000 a year and juggling their finances, they were encouraged to pay taxes, but at the end of the fiscal year when Government coffers had “a piece of change”, every cent paid in taxes was returned under the compensatory income credit, Mottley said. ( AC)

Schitt’s Creek and Home Alone star Catherine O’Hara dies aged 71

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Catherine O’Hara, the comedic actress best known for her starring roles in the Home Alone and Beetlejuice films, as well as her Emmy-winning turn in Schitt’s Creek, has died aged 71.

The Canadian star rose to fame through Toronto’s Second City improvisation troupe and on SCTV, before making a name for herself in the US in 1988’s Beetlejuice and as the matriarch in the holiday classic Home Alone.

O’Hara, whose colleagues remembered her as a “wonderful person, artist and collaborator”, most recently appeared in the Emmy-winning comedy The Studio and HBO’s The Last of Us.

O’Hara’s agent told the BBC in a statement that she died on Friday at her home in Los Angeles following a brief illness.

O’Hara made lightning strike twice in her career with indelible cinematic turns.

In 1988’s spooky satire Beetlejuice, she played Delia Deetz, who led her possessed dinner guests in an enthralling song and dance performance of Day-O (the Banana Boat song).

Two years later, in Home Alone, her panicked scream of “Kevin!” as she realises her mischievous eight-year-old son had been left behind during their Christmas holiday is among the most memorable moments from one of the most successful film comedies ever.

Her young co-star Macaulay Culkin, now 45, paid tribute to his on-screen mother on Friday, sharing images of the two of them from the film and in later years: “Mama. I thought we had time. I wanted more. I wanted to sit in a chair next to you. I heard you. But I had so much more to say. I love you. I’ll see you later.”

The Toronto-born actress got her foot in the door as a waitress at the Toronto Second City theatre franchise in the 1970s, before auditioning for a role with the famed acting troupe.

She further developed her comedic chops after joining the cast of sketch comedy show Second City Television (SCTV) – one of the most successful Canadian TV programmes ever – alongside the likes of Eugene Levy and the late John Candy.

She has credited her Canadian roots with helping develop her sense of humour.

In 2020, she told Rolling Stone that growing up Canadian didn’t have the same sense of nationalism or patriotism that she saw in the US.

“And that’s a good thing because it does make you look outside of yourself and be aware of the world and not take yourself seriously,” she said.

“And I think Canadians have not only a sense of humour about others but also about themselves.”

Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney joined Canadians and fans across the world in mourning O’Hara.

“Over 5 decades of work, Catherine earned her place in the canon of Canadian comedy – from the iconic Toronto production of Godspell to SCTV to Schitt’s Creek,” he said. “Canada has lost a legend.”

O’Hara also collaborated with Christopher Guest and co-writer Eugene Levy four times, including on the critically acclaimed mockumentary films Waiting for Guffman, Best in Show, A Mighty Wind and For Your Consideration. Her role as character actress Marilyn Hack in For Your Consideration earned her the 2006 National Board of Review Award for supporting actress.

Guest said in a statement to Variety that he was devastated and that “we have lost one of the comic giants of our age”.

O’Hara had a late career surge thanks to the Canadian comedy series Schitt’s Creek that became one of the biggest hits of the Covid pandemic.

The fish-out-of-water comedy show followed the wealthy Rose family as they abruptly lose their money and mansion, and are forced to move into a shabby motel in a deadbeat town they bought as a joke.

O’Hara’s character Moira was a particular delight, with her wildly fluctuating accent, outlandish fashion sense, and brilliant one-liners, like: “Never assume, Twyla, because when you assume, it makes an ass out of… both of us.”

Upon winning the Emmy Award for actress in a comedy, O’Hara thanked her co-stars Eugene and Dan Levy for giving her the opportunity to play “a woman of a certain age – my age – who gets to fully be her ridiculous self”.

Dan Levy, who played her son David in the series, which he also co-wrote and produced, said it was a gift “to have gotten to dance in the warm glow of Catherine O’Hara’s brilliance”.

“Having spent over 50 years collaborating with my dad, Catherine was extended family before she ever played my family,” he wrote.

“It’s hard to imagine a world without her in it. I will cherish every funny memory I was fortunate enough to make with her.”

O’Hara had continued working until very close to her death, playing a therapist in HBO’s sci-fi drama The Last of Us and as an ousted movie executive in Seth Rogen’s The Studio just last year.

In The Studio, she embodied Patty Leigh, a studio boss replaced by Rogen’s character, who pursues more creative roles as a film producer and makes her way to the Golden Globes – a stage that O’Hara was no stranger to.

She won a Golden Globe for best actress in 2021 for her role in Schitt’s Creek and was nominated for her role in The Studio at this year’s awards.

She is also nominated at the Actor Awards (formerly the Screen Actors Guild Awards), which take place in March, for her role as Patty.

Rogen said on Friday that, when he first met O’Hara, he told her she “was the funniest person I’d ever had the pleasure of watching on screen” and that Home Alone was the film that made him want to make movies.

“Getting to work with her was a true honour,” he wrote on Instagram. “She was hysterical, kind, intuitive, generous… she made me want to make our show good enough to be worthy of her presence in it.

“This is just devastating. We’re all lucky we got to live in a world with her in it.”

Film director Judd Apatow, replying to Rogen’s post, added: “Brilliant and kind. Riotously funny for 50 years. A really special person.”

O’Hara is survived by her husband Bo Welch and sons Matthew and Luke, as well as her siblings Michael O’Hara, Mary Margaret O’Hara, Maureen Jolley, Marcus O’Hara, Tom O’Hara and Patricia Wallice.

(BBC News)

World Bank opens new Caribbean offices in Jamaica

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The World Bank Group, has officially opened its new, energy-efficient offices here, which will serve as the hub for its Caribbean operations.

The building brings the Bank’s Caribbean team together in one physical space, which will strengthen the institution’s presence and support in Jamaica and the wider region.

In 2021, the World Bank moved its Caribbean operations from Washington DC to the island as part of a strategic shift to decentralise functions to the field offices.

Minister without Portfolio in the Office of the Prime Minister with responsibility for Efficiency, Innovation and Digital Transformation, Ambassador Audrey Marks commended the move by the Bank.

“Today’s opening of the World Bank’s Belmont office is not only the launch of a new workplace. It is a visible statement of long-term partnership, trust and shared ambition between Jamaica and the World Bank,” she said.

Marks said the World Bank has been a key development partner, noting the impact of the institution’s support in building the foundations of a modern, digital economy and strong institutions with capable systems, and a workforce prepared for the future.

“For decades, the World Bank has walked alongside Jamaica at pivotal moments in our developing journey. From strengthening economic resilience, supporting institutional reform and social investment, this partnership has consistently been anchored in a shared belief that sustainable development must be inclusive, forward-looking and people-centered, and in many ways, this building exemplifies that belief,” she said.

The World Bank supports Jamaica’s development through a 2024-2027 framework focusing on human capital, economic growth, and resilience. Key activities include financing education, healthcare, and social protection. The Bank also invests in disaster risk reduction, private sector modernisation, and climate resilience projects.

Country Director for Caribbean Countries, World Bank, Lilia Burunciuc, in her remarks, said that the new building reflects the Bank’s focus on sustainability.

“We are very proud of this. Our mission is a world free of poverty on a liveable planet. So, the liveable planet is an important part of it, and we would like to implement what we preach, which is energy efficiency, environmental consciousness, and sustainability, which is what this office is about.

“It’s not only a new, beautiful building that actually increases our productivity, but it also an Excellence in Design for Greater Efficiencies (EDGE)-certified building. EDGE certification is an advanced certification, which is actually a global standard for measuring energy, for measuring weather and the overall efficiency of the building,” she pointed out. The EDGE certification, which is an International Finance Corporation (IFC)-created green building certification system, will enable the office to consume 65 per cent lower energy, 42 per cent lower weather use and 25 per cent lower inverted energy.

 Burunciuc, who assumed office in Jamaica on July 1, 2021, said when she arrived in the island, “it was the first time that a director for the region was being sent to the region”.

“The previous director was sitting in Washington,” she pointed out.

Burunciuc said that the Jamaica office at the time was small, with persons having to share space.

“Finally, we have a new [building] where everybody has an office. We had to share, sometimes two, sometimes three people in the previous office, so we’re very happy to be here today,” she said. (CMC)

Ex-CDB boss passes away

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Former president of the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB), Dr Warren Smith, passed away yesterday.

A Jamaican, he is credited with transforming the CDB, putting in place structural improvements and aligning it more closely with the international multilateral agencies. He was president from 2011 to 2021 and retired on April 30, 2021, subsequently leaving Barbados to return to Jamaica.

Smith first joined CDB in 1985 and was elected as the fifth president of the regional finance institution based in Barbados, at a special meeting of the CDB Board of Governors held on October 29, 2010, succeeding Dr Compton Bourne, after acting in the capacity of vice-president (operations).

Current CDB president Daniel Best, in paying tribute, stated: “Dr Smith was a mentor and a guide to me at many critical junctures during my career. He devoted his life’s work to the proposition that Caribbean people deserve strong, modern institutions that are fully on their side.

“When he assumed office as president of CDB in 2011, he guided the institution through some of its most challenging moments with steadiness, resolve, and an unwavering belief in what the Bank could and should represent for the region. He demanded excellence from those around him because he believed deeply in our collective responsibility to serve the Caribbean with integrity, rigour and purpose. His legacy lives on in the institution he helped strengthen, the people he shaped, and the development path he helped chart for our region,” he added.

“The Caribbean has lost a giant of the development movement. However, the work he began is now ours to carry forward as we strengthen the institution he helped shape and advance the Caribbean future he believed in so deeply.”

Best said a condolence book will be available for signing at the bank’s Wildey, St Michael, headquarters from 10 a.m. on Monday. (GC)

A mix of reactions

Some residents of Six Men’s Village in St Peter are optimistic about moves that will allow long-time inhabitants to secure legal titles.

Some, on the other hand, have reservations about the motives behind the action.

During a Barbados Labour Party meeting in Speightstown on Wednesday night, St Peter candidate Colin Jordan, the incumbent, noted that for decades, residents have lived without legal title, some without direct water connections and were dismissed as squatters under previous administrations.

He reported that 37 households have already received letters from the National Housing Corporation to begin the title transfer process, with about half of the area now surveyed. He also outlined plans to realign some houses to ensure access for emergency vehicles as part of Six Men’s Life Improvement Project.

Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley, also at that meeting, said that along with the 37 qualified tenants, surveys are under way to complete the process for all 132 families and that residents would be able to purchase land at ten cents per square foot.

For Paula Husbands, who has lived in the family home all her life, the challenges with the title transfer have been ongoing for years but “should have been dealt with every since”.

“We had a town hall meeting at a church some time back and what we would have been told is that the Government did acquire the land ages ago. So if they did, why is it happening now?” she asked.

“If they’re sincere, they should really try to do some more before the actual election, because even with the land as it is, it needed some improvements.”

Still concerns

Husbands said there were concerns among the people that the Pendry Estates, which is erecting the massive Pendry hotel in the Six Men’s area, has expressed interest in acquiring land for expansion.

“There are rumours of Pendry wanting more of this land as well. There’s even rumour of the Fish Pot (an ocean-front restaurant) putting in some kind of tender for this land. I don’t have the proof, but in every rumour, there’s a bit of truth.

“At the meetings too, they were telling us that after a period of time, you can sell your land if you want to. So there’s a trick in every trade. There are some people that will want to sell the land and move, because some would have money that they would have never seen in their lifetime. So it can be a catch for some people,” she told the Saturday Sun yesterday.

Good offer

Husbands said the option for qualified tenants to purchase land at ten cents was a good offer and one that would allow their children to own something of their own.

Having lived in Six Men’s for 50 years, 88-year-old Frank McClean said while the opportunity was a long in coming, everything happens at its right time.

“In here want improvements and we need better roads. When the rain falls you can’t get out and you get flooded out, but you can’t rush anything, it has to take time,” he said.

Jaquon Austin, who has lived in his family home for 25 years, said he was looking to secure somewhere he could call his own.

“I didn’t want to move, so to say that now don’t have to, and I can own a piece of the land, is something I really appreciate it, so I can work with it,” he said.

Samuel Jack, who has lived in the area since 1980, said they had been waiting patiently and were glad the time to own the land had come.

However, another resident, who declined to be identified, expressed scepticism over the proposed move, saying she believed it was done as a way to influence residents into selling their land.

“I believe they will sell the land at ten cents per square foot because they want to buy it back from us. They want the land for the hotel. I don’t even believe it’s electionrelated; I believe it is because they want the land for the hotels and they want to push us out,” she said. (JRN)

VIDEO: DLP present candidates in Oistins

Highlights from the presentation of Democratic Labour Party candidates at Oistins, Christ Church, on July 29, 2026.

CDB working to unlock capital

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The Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) is intensifying efforts, including the implementation of new programmes, to widen access to millions of dollars in financing and technical assistance for clients in Barbados and its other borrowing member countries.

President Daniel Best gave that commitment here during the CAF Latin America and Caribbean Economic Forum at the Panama Convention Centre.

Financing need

He was concerned that with Caribbean entrepreneurs and businesses having an overall financing need of US$10 billion, there was more than US$7 billion in liquidity, including commercial bank savings, not reaching them.

Best was participating in a panel discussion on South-South Connection: Community Of Latin American And Caribbean States-Africa Partnerships Toward A New Global Leadership.

“In the Caribbean . . . we have in excess of US$7 billion in liquidity in our commercial banking sector sitting doing nothing,” he lamented.

“But what we have also is . . . entrepreneurs and businesses with approximately US$10 billion of ideas that are going nowhere, and we have US$6 billion to US$7 billion in funding that isn’t reaching them, so we have a disconnect.

“We in the multilateral development banking community can’t continue to sit on the sidelines and hope that it is figured out between the banking sector and the private sector and government.”

The CDB boss noted this was why “last year, we developed a trade finance guarantee programme, providing first loss guarantees to the commercial banking sector, for entrepreneurs, for businesses, focused on trade.

“What does that mean? It reduces the risk of commercial banks to invest in these companies, thereby unlocking capital from the commercial banks, but also facilitating the movement of goods and services intraregionally and across the Atlantic, to Africa and to other parts of the world,” he said.

Technical assistance

“We didn’t stop there. We are providing [technical assistance] to those businesses to become ready to move their finances. It’s not an indictment on commercial banks, but just . . . the fact that they haven’t done it very often. Most commercial banks and the loans officers that these entrepreneurs will face have no idea how to appraise these projects.

“So we are actually undertaking training in the commercial banking sector, such that when these new businesses are cleared for loans and they’re going to the bank, officers will know how to appraise them, thereby unlocking trade.”

Best also reported that last month, the CDB’s board approved the Caribbean Community Resilience Fund developed by Sygnus, an equity house out of Jamaica, US$250 million to develop projects in the Caribbean.

“But not just looking at projects within the Caribbean, but providing technical assistance to businesses within the Caribbean to help them prepare their projects and get them to a stage of readiness for capital investment.”

Best also said the CDB was “developing perhaps the most comprehensive community mapping that has ever taken place in the Caribbean, and with that, we will be far more targeted in how we design projects and programmes”.

He said that while now was a challenging time for the Caribbean, including from geopolitical challenges, the region remained “a highly, highly investable place. We have natural endowments in terms of both our tourism assets, but also, of course, commodities.

“We have a highlyeducated workforce, and most importantly, we have stable, democratically elected governments. And not withstanding how this year may have begun for us, it is still a zone of peace in the world,” he asserted. (SC)

Stay safe this flu season

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​Just over a month ago, Barbados, like many countries around the world, was hit by a surge in respiratory illnesses at the peak of the flu season.

For Dr Corey Forde, the Director of Clinical and Diagnostic Services at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH), this spike was no surprise. As an Infectious Disease Specialist, he had been closely monitoring the international trends in the US, the UK, and Europe weeks before the virus reached our shores.

​Dr Forde explains that this season’s illnesses included the Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) and the particularly aggressive H3N2 strain of Influenza A.

In an update this week, he noted that the number of patients seeking emergency care at the hospital has finally started to decline.

​However, Dr Forde warns that Barbados is not out of the woods just yet. He points out that viral cases can rise and fall unexpectedly,  stressing that we must remain vigilant. He is urging Barbadians to keep a close eye on their health and to act responsibly. For those who feel unwell, he suggests seeking primary care first—through private doctors or local polyclinics—before rushing to the Accident and Emergency Department (AED).

​To keep the numbers down, he advises the public to stay at home when feeling sick and to avoid close contact with others who are ill. He also reminded that simple habits remain our best defense: cover your mouth and nose when coughing or sneezing, and wash your hands often to protect yourself and your family from germs.

​For the full story, including expert advice on recovery and a look at the science behind the surge, read our special feature “Battling the Bug: Navigating the Cold and Flu Season” in the Weekend Nation.

#MeAndMyNation #YourNewsYourTimeYourWay #TheSourceMatters #Barbados

Former CNN anchor Don Lemon arrested after church protest in Minnesota

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Former CNN anchor Don Lemon has been arrested for his involvement in a protest at a church, his lawyer and a Justice Department official familiar with the situation said on Friday.

Lemon livestreamed a demonstration earlier this month that interrupted a church service in St. Paul, Minnesota, protesting President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown in the area.

Lemon is charged with conspiring to deprive others of their civil rights and violating the FACE Act by allegedly obstructing access to a house of worship, according to a Justice Department official. FBI and Homeland Security Investigations agents arrested him in Los Angeles, the source said.

Lemon’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, called his arrest an “unprecedented attack on the First Amendment.”

Lemon said he was at the demonstration as a journalist. He said he was tipped off ahead of time but did not know the activists would disrupt the service. He can be seen arguing with a parishioner about immigration enforcement.

Trump administration officials quickly condemned the demonstration and accused protesters of intimidating Christian worshippers.

Federal agents arrested three other people and charged them with violating the FACE Act, a 1994 law that prevents obstructing abortion clinics and places of worship, but a U.S. judge earlier this month declined to approve Lemon’s arrest, citing a lack of evidence.

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Lemon spent 17 years at CNN, becoming one of its most recognizable personalities.

CNN fired him in 2023 after he made on-air comments about women and then-Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley that were widely perceived as sexist. Lemon later apologized.

Flash-flood watch remains in effect

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A flash-flood watch remains in effect for Barbados following continuous moderate to heavy showers overnight into early Friday morning.

The Barbados Meteorological Services (BMS) extended the watch after persistent rainfall affected sections of the island, with the unsettled conditions forecast to continue throughout the morning.

Between one and four inches (25mm to 100mm) of rainfall have already been recorded in some areas, with an additional one to two inches (25mm to 50mm) possible before midday. The BMS said surface to low-level instability, combined with adequate moisture, contributed to the overnight activity.

Forecasters warned of a moderate possibility of soil erosion on bare or scarred land surfaces, as well as water settling on roads and in fields. Rising water levels in existing water bodies, along with the excess and overflow of storm drains and water canals onto roads and properties, are also possible.

A flash-flood watch is issued when conditions are favourable for gradual flooding, generally over a period greater than two hours. It does not mean flooding will occur, but that it is possible. Watches may be issued up to 48 hours in advance.

The current watch was issued at 7 a.m. today and is scheduled to be updated at 12 noon or sooner if conditions warrant.