Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Solution - Silent coup on gangs - Millions being spent to train and get employment for reformed gang members

Jamaica Gleaner Online
Silent coup on gangs - Millions being spent to train and get employment for reformed gang members
Published: Tuesday March 31, 2009
Tyrone Reid, Staff Reporter



( L - R ) Hinds, Charles
Gang members are reportedly giving up their guns for training and gainful employment, thanks in part to an in-your-face Government initiative.
The bold state-run venture has a multimillion-dollar price tag and targets current gang members, as well as prospective recruits.
However, though no immediate statistics on the level of impact were available, the initiative might prove a small price to pay on the country's path to peace and prosperity. Minister of Labour and Social Security Pearnel Charles, revealed that the Government initiative has put a dent in gang operations without firing a single shot as some crews have been losing members to the multimillion-dollar government programme.
"We have put a few million dollars together to challenge some of those kids who are in the gangs," said Charles, while speaking at the Yes You Can Survive 2009 seminar earlier this month. "I said to a guy, 'You break the chain of the gang and join me and I will train you and give you a job overseas or a job in Jamaica, and we have put millions of dollars there and I want to tell you, they are coming."
The minister said a few young men had told him that they would rather be gainfully employed than be out stealing and running afoul of the law. Charles said a man asked him if he thought stealing was easy. Others told the minister they stole to supply the needs of their families.
"Those who we are breaking through the gangs to said to us, very clearly, they only go in there to eat a food and if they can eat a food outside, they are not going in there."
He added: "So we are taking them out and we are preventing those who want to go in to eat a food from going."
The labour minister believes much of the country's crime and violence could have been averted if jobs had been provided for many unemployed youths before they were initiated into gangs.
"You would be surprised to know that there are many young people involved in crime out there today who, if they had an opportunity to get a job, either here or abroad, they would not have been involved."
Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Glenmore Hinds told The Gleaner that there had been a reduction in the number of shootings and murders so far this year when compared to the corresponding period last year.
Hinds said most shootings and murders were gang related. "That would indicate a decrease in gang activity," he said.
Factors
Though it might seem the Government's plan was working, the senior cop hastened to point out that the reduction was due to a multiplicity of factors or "a series of interventions".
"It is really a combination of intervention measures. You don't want to put it down to one single measure. That wouldn't be accurate."
Hinds explained that the police's focus on gangs and the hot spots in which they operated, coupled with the efforts of social-outreach programmes, had contributed to the decline in shootings and murders.
The senior cop said the Government's train-and-transform programme was very important to controlling crime.
tyrone.reid@gleanerjm.com
Copyright Jamaica-Gleaner.com

Monday, March 30, 2009

Solutions Jamaica -Health authority trains workers to treat diabetes and St Thomas infirmary rears own poultry

Health authority trains workers to treat diabetes Fifty-two health-care workers within the South East Regional Health Authority (SERHA) are now better equipped with the necessary skills to help diabetic patients control their condition.The personnel, who included doctors, nurses, nutritionists, and dieticians... http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20090330/lead/lead4.html

St Thomas infirmary rears own poultry
The St Thomas Infirmary is now self-sufficient in poultry, as the protein source is produced on the premises in Morant Bay.Financing of the project, valued at some US$10,400, was provided by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) of the United... http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20090330/lead/lead5.html

Youths pledge to 'take back' Jamaica by Petrina Francis

Published: Sunday March 29, 2009
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer Michelle Simpson, vice-president of the Kingston Western Police Youth Clubs, performs a dance during the council's annual prayer breakfast held yesterday at the St Andrew Technical High school auditorium in St Andrew.
"WE CAN take back Jamaica and I think the Police Youth Clubs (PYC) are the perfect place to start," says president Rory Griffiths.
Griffiths is confident that the youths of the Kingston Western Police Division can and will be vanguards of change in Jamaica through their respective clubs.
The Sunday Gleaner yesterday met several young men and women at the forefront at the Kingston Western Police Youth Clubs Council's annual prayer breakfast, held at St Andrew Technical High School.
The council is made up of members of the various clubs in the division.
Maintain good relations
Griffiths says PYCs are relevant in communities because they provide an opportunity for residents to maintain a good relationship with the police. The clubs, he says, also build unity in communities.
"Some people are afraid to go into other areas of the communities because of existing tensions, so we are trying to eliminate that fear," says Griffiths, who also represents the Eagle Hikers PYC in Denham Town.
Griffiths' club, for example, hosts fund-raising activities and invites members from other communities in the area.
"This only works sometimes, because we are not getting 100 per cent support from the community," he laments.
It is unfortunate, he says, that some people are of the view that people from the inner city cannot excel.
"But we are going to show them that positive changes can happen in our communities. We are making the change," he declares.
One club, Presi-dential Click, in Tivoli Gardens, has already debunked the myth that youth clubs are just a place for the young to meet and play games and sports. This club has adopted the SOS Children's Village in St Andrew and the Milk Lane Golden Age Home in west Kingston.
"Our children and elderly need our love and support, so we have to go out there and assist them," says Cassandra Hurd, treasurer of Presidential Click Police Youth Club.
petrina.francis@gleanerjm.com
http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20090329/lead/lead3.html

Thursday, March 12, 2009

St Thomas communities mobilise

St Thomas communities mobilise
Published: Thursday March 12, 2009
Residents, including children, help with unloading stones from a truck for work being done at the check dams in Somerset, St Thomas. A check dam is a small temporary dam constructed across low-lying or depressed and often wet land or drainage ditch. - Contributed
Residents of Five in St Thomas, where banana was once the main crop, are now eager participants in a rural diversification project aimed at sustaining their livelihood.
The first phase of the project is rehabilitating and providing new check dams to deal with land slippage and flooding in Somerset.
The project is being implemented by the Women's Resource and Outreach Centre (WROC) with the support of the European Union, Christian Aid and the Rural Agricultural Development Authority.
Ground was broken last month for the construction of a check dam at the Fitzgerald Gully in Somerset and excavation work is already complete. The work was critical because heavy showers inundate Somerset with tonnes of soil and millions of gallons of water from two gullies, Fitzgerald and Church.
Great losses
Residents are often forced to abandon their homes and suffer great losses.
Although two check dams were built to address the situation, these have been damaged due, among other things, to the scale of the inflow of dirt and water and poor maintenance.
Community members will be helping to build two check dams closer to the most active areas of both gullies.
Construction will reduce the velocity of water run off and retard the movement of top soil down slope.
Workers for the project have been selected from a group of ex-banana workers as well as others who stand to benefit.
The work on the check dams is being implemented with technical support from the Forestry Department, Water Resources Authority and St Thomas Parish Council, said Claudia Sewell, coordinator of the project, operating from WROC's office in Morant Bay.
Improving living standards
Another programme, the rural diversification project, is expected to benefit residents of Trinityville, Johnson Mountain, Spring Bank and Mount Vernon.
It is geared at improving the living standards and quality of life of farmers, farm workers, their families and communities with a wide range of initiatives.