Friday, December 19, 2008

Give civilians administrative jobs in the Force – Hamilton


Sunday, 02 November 2008

Former Public Defender Howard Hamilton has weighed in on the reported shortage of policemen.Last week, National Security Minister Colonel Trevor MacMillan said the Jamaica Constabulary Force is 3,800 short of the 12,000 members needed.He said this was creating a serious constraint on the capacity of the police to effectively and efficiently fight crime.But Mr. Hamilton said the shortage can be dealt with by reassigning members of the Force. "There are a lot of clerical jobs being done by policemen which could be civilianized ... so that you bring in civilians to do that, and have policemen who are already there assigned to different areas," he said.Mr. Hamilton was speaking on RJR's weekly news review programme "That's a Rap!" on Sunday.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Committee proposes alternative use for waste

Committee proposes alternative use for waste
Published: Thursday December 18, 2008
A tractor unloads marl, to be used as a buffer at a Windalco mud lake in Kendal, Manchester, in this March 2006 photograph. The Bunting committee has turned the spotlight on environmental concerns in the sector. - file
A COMMITTEE of Parliament, which deliberated on the future of the bauxite industry, has recommended that research be conducted with a view to finding ways of recycling waste from bauxite production.
The committee, chaired by Central Manchester Member of Parliament, Peter Bunting, delivered its report to the House of Representatives on Tuesday.
Approximately 40 per cent of every load of bauxite gets sent to a mud lake as waste.
The committee expressed concern that bauxite waste might have grave environmental consequences.
Bauxite is a major foreign-exchange earner for Jamaica, grossing in excess of US$1 billion per annum. Some 26 per cent of land in Jamaica contains the ore, but many persons in bauxite-rich communities are keen to know post-production ramifications.
Industry standards
Socioeconomic, environmental and health concerns have been highlighted by the committee.
The Bunting committee recommended the establishment of dust- and noise-monitoring stations as a means of forcing bauxite companies to meet industry standards. The group proposed that the levels of dust not only be evaluated in bauxite areas, but also in surrounding communities.
The committee also recommended that research be pursued on the health and environmental impact on employees and communities affec-ted by bauxite and mining.
It also suggested that areas of ecological importance in bauxite-producing regions be closed to mining.
Greener Jamaica
Underscoring a commitment to a greener Jamaica, the committee said policies should be implemented to protect the environment, "including the use of more environmentally friendly processes in the extraction of bauxite and identifying the deposits' depths".
On the social perspective, the committee suggested an independent body be established to assess the value of lands in bauxite areas to ensure that citizens get appropriate remuneration.
The report to the House cited an instance of one woman who, after 10 years, is still to receive compensation for land from which she was relocated to accommodate bauxite production.
The Bunting committee also said that resettlement from an original property also poses severe problems, including the break-up of family structures and challenges of integration into new communities.
Play greater role
Meanwhile, the parliamentary group has suggested that bauxite companies play a greater role in the development of communities in which they operate.
"Companies need to give back more to generate economic and social development in the affected communities, as there is life after bauxite," the committee concluded.
Government had set out a framework for bauxite companies to contribute to the development of communities by way of a levy on production.
However, many members of parliament who represent bauxite-producing communities, as well as citizens, have complained that money from the levy was often channelled towards budgetary support and not for its intended purpose; community development.
daraine.luton@gleanerjm.com.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Volunteer offer: 'We'll take back Jamaica' - MIKE BECKLES excellence3@verizon.net

Published: Tuesday December 9, 2008

The Editor, Sir:
An article appeared in the online edition of The Star on December 8, which, I thought, removed all doubts from the minds of any person of sound mind and judgment about who is in charge in Jamaica - the gunmen, terrorists and thugs.
Gone is any semblance of control, at least on the part of the security forces.
The article of which I speak is the police-supervised mass exodus of law-abiding homeowners and other residents of Gravel Heights, St Catherine, after they were ordered to leave because they committed the cardinal sin of being 'informers' (they spoke to the police).
Chilling message
This purported action led to a raid in the community by the security forces and, of course, all the police did was to provide security for the exodus of the people.
The chilling message this sends to the rest of the criminal elements is this is the way to go; pretty soon law-abiding residents of Jamaica will be extinct.
So, I have a proposal for the Government. I am a former cop and am willing to drop everything I have to do and come down there with other like-minded former cops.
We would operate under the law but with no political interference, and no mouthing from human rights
spokespersons. And I assure the people of Jamaica we will take back our country, street by street.
We did it before, we will do it again. We fear no one, no don.
Mr. Prime Minister, the time for talk is over, soon you will be confined to just uptown Kingston as the security forces will not be able to go anywhere in this small country.
We will operate under the law, but want no interference, or management from anyone in the Government or security forces. That's my offer.
I am, etc.
MIKE BECKLES
excellence3@verizon.net
Via Go-Jamaica