Anguilla
INTEGRITY IN THE PUBLIC SERVICE – The Anguillian Newspaper – The Weekly Independent Paper of Anguilla


Wednesday, 1 February 2023, I heard a senior government administrator on Radio Anguilla explaining how loyal, efficient, and hard-working all the members of the Anguilla public service are. They are all, apparently, undervalued and misunderstood by members of the public. In relation to some of them, nothing can be further from the truth, as any Anguillian who regularly interacts with the public service can attest. Members of the health and education services are notable exceptions.
The level of corruption in some other sectors of the public service over the years has been staggering. There are several professionals in the service illegally moonlighting in the private sector. Some have the requisite permission of the Public Service Integrity Board (PSIB) to do so. The rest are doing it contrary to the Code of Ethics in the Public Service.
The Governor has delegated to the PSIB the task of investigating conflicts of interest when public servants apply for permission to engage in private enterprise on the side. The PSIB in suitable cases recommends permission which is then granted by the Governor in writing. This is a prerequisite before civil servants can apply to private establishments for after-hours work.
Some private sector employers do not employ moonlighting public servants on a permanent basis. They are considered casual employees. Once the second job is kept quiet and off the record, the employer does not pay either Social Security or the Interim Stabilization Levy on their wages or tips. They don’t have to pay medical benefits or holidays with pay. This illegal labour is a cheap substitute for full-time employees. Social Security and the Inland Revenue are defrauded.
Some of the computer specialists in the IT Department in years past quietly offered their services for a fee to offices, supermarkets, and businesses in the private sector. I have heard it said by senior administrators that there is nothing wrong with that. After all, this expertise was in rare supply. These services were said to be desperately required in the private sector. That is nonsense.
That justification is on a par with the tongue-in-cheek excuse we heard in the 1980s when conflicts of interest first began to envelop the public service. It was said then that civil servants who illegally provide technical and professional services in the private sector were not engaged in conflicts of interest, but in a “convergence of interests”. There was said to be an insufficient number of qualified persons in the private sector to take on the specialist tasks that, if the island was to become modernized and efficient, trained government employees would have to contribute their expertise to ensure the objective was achieved. So, the interests of the public and the interests of government were said to converge.
The Registered Land Act and the Land Surveyors Act provide for government surveyors to perform certain surveying jobs as part of their duties. It is a function of the Surveying Department to ensure that missing boundary stones are replaced. One of the government surveyors’ jobs is to do any survey necessary for the Registrar of Lands and the Director of Surveys to sort out disputed boundaries. It is a government service for which government is expected to be paid. There is a scale of fees set out in the Regulations. So, if you ring the Department and request a surveyor to replace your missing boundary mark, a surveyor will turn up. But you may then be informed that he is performing the survey on a private basis. You pay him, not government.
A government surveyor working privately deprives the Inland Revenue Department of the prescribed fee. This amounts to a fraud on the revenue. Not to mention that it is contrary to the terms of his employment. His head of department has no authority to give him permission. Nor will he have the permission of the Public Service Integrity Board to engage in this clear conflict of interest. And private sector surveyors are cheated out of a job.
If you dine at one of our fine restaurants, you are likely to notice that some of the waiters and waitresses are permanent civil servants moonlighting on a second job. Sure, their enterprise in finding a way to earn enough to supplement their meagre salaries is commendable. But it is illegal if they do not have the permission of the Governor through the PSIB.
For decades there have been accountants in the public service who offered private accounting services to local businesses. The Governor’s permission was not sought. This amounted to unfair competition with accountants in the private sector. Some were known to work with private accountants who accepted their work as their own and signed off on the accounts. This was part of the well-known Anguillian profession of “fronting”.
Some police officers moonlight, working at nights as security for restaurants, “sports bars”, illegal casinos, and other businesses on the island. The employers love it as their businesses are protected on the cheap. There are several private security firms that are deprived of the opportunity to provide these services. But they are more expensive than illegally moonlighting public servants, as they have greater overheads.
One customs broker tells me there were until recently officers in the Customs Department that provided informal customs brokerage services. Even if there were only one or two of them, think of the conflicts of interest this presented! It was some years ago, but one day I was passing outside Radio Anguilla and saw a person in uniform hustling out of the old Customs office building. He furtively accepted a bundle of documents from an apparent representative of a foreign developer and disappeared back into the office.
Think of the conflict of interest this involved. The temptation must have been to under value some of these dutiable transactions on the understanding that the officer would collect a fee for the “service” he was providing. It was not only a conflict of interest which corrupted the public servant in question, it also encouraged defrauding the revenue.
I am upset that these public servants undermined the income of the public who were in unfair competition with them for these jobs. Private sector employees did not have the advantage of a permanent job with a regular salary to go back to every morning.
Statutory boards are not strictly part of the public service. But they are very much public sector. Some years ago, government announced that all statutory Board members must successfully complete a management course that government had arranged with the Community College. There, they would be lectured in good governance, avoiding conflicts of interest, and the need for integrity in the conduct of their duties. Gradually, this exercise petered out.
The announcement that you must be qualified before your appointment to a Board was not backed up by any law or statutory regulation. It was therefore not enforceable. Ministers who advise the Governor on appointments found it frustrating to deal with Boards which refused to be intimidated and which instead insisted on doing things the right way. So, many qualified Board members were fired and replaced with the usual unqualified girlfriends and cronies who were easier to influence.
The low standard of governance that prevail in the past and probably continues is truly shocking. Some years ago, in a well-meaning gesture that was typically ineffective, futile, and misleading, Anguilla’s Executive Council “declared” that all single use plastics were illegal, and their importation banned. Now, as every Anguillian schoolchild knows, there is a law under which Executive Council can genuinely prohibit the importation of any commodity deemed contrary to the public good. But instead of using the prescribed mechanism, they engaged in this useless exercise of making an announcement.
We all knew this “banning” was unenforceable from the moment it was published in the newspaper and billboards. Printed at the foot of each announcement was the attribution, “Barbados Public Service.” Barbadian prohibitions have no legal effect in Anguilla. For a few months, supermarkets and groceries tried to comply. Some still do by using biodegradable green plastic bags. But some continue to supply non-degradable plastic bags.
It was like the “banning” of Pitbulls and Rottweilers after the baby-mauling in The Forest. Or the prohibiting of amplified music late at night to the disturbance of the public. Or the band of young louts we see at all hours of the day loitering around the gates of the Comprehensive School, preying on pre-pubescent schoolgirls. Or the open running of illegal brothels and casinos. Or the illegal sand mining from the dunes and beaches. Or the dumping of truckloads of domestic and commercial garbage on the sides of minor roads. Or the unauthorised emptying of the contents of septic tanks on back roads.
So, I am done with it now. I am considering ceasing all efforts to encourage a rise in standards in the public service. The rant may be good for reducing my blood pressure, but it is pointless. This will, hopefully therefore, be my last essay on the topic of the lack of public service integrity in Anguilla.
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Anguilla
MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT EXPRESS CONCERN OVER CALLOUS ACTS OF GUN VIOLENCE – The Anguillian Newspaper – The Weekly Independent Paper of Anguilla



On Tuesday 10th May, 2023, Members of the House of Assembly passionately expressed their concerns about the recent slew of gun violence on the island, particularly in the wake of Sunday night’s murder of the late Garmon Greenaway, and two other shooting incidents that occurred one week prior.
Thirty-five-year-old Garmon, a Customs Officer in the Anguilla Public Service, was killed in the vicinity of his residence on Sunday night. During the House of Assembly sitting on Tuesday, Members of Parliament commented on the tragedy.
While the Honorable Acting Premier, Mr. Kenneth Hodge, had otherwise issued a message to the community to “show a collective and concerted effort in removing guns from our streets”, he said in the House that he remembered Garmon as a very helpful young man.
“Today, we mourn the loss of young Garmon Greenaway,” the Acting Premier said soberly. “He was a young Customs Officer who was a very pleasant chap, Madam Speaker. I knew him quite well, as a very helpful individual. We extend to his family our sincere condolences.”
The Honourable Minister of Education and Social Development, Ms. DeeAnn Kentish-Rogers, observed that Garmon’s murder shows disregard for human life and requested prayers for his mourning family.
“In a moment like this where people are suffering so greatly from the inhumane, awful manner in which disregard for human life was demonstrated, I would encourage all of us to remember to pray for the family who now grieve, she said.”
Opposition Leader, Mrs. Cora Richardson-Hodge, said that action needs to be taken now in revisiting the laws against guns.
“The time has come for us, Madam Speaker, to revisit our laws. We need to look at the situation with which we are faced in this country. We need to be forward thinking,: she said. “If we do not take action today, where will we be tomorrow? Do we want to get to the stage where we have shootings in our grocery stores, (Heaven forbid); or in our schools? (Heaven forbid).”
“Crimes of this kind occur in other countries,” she lamented. “But let us not think that they would only happen off-shore, figuring that Anguilla will not be impacted. We are a global village. We must think globally, for our young people are exposed to everything that happens in the world.”
“There is a lot of work to be done in this country, Madam Speaker. And while we do nor cast any blame on any individual, group or organization, I support any initiative that is taken to come together to help us identify and address the difficulties that we are facing on this island and put a stop to gun crime,” Mrs. Richardson-Hodge said.
“We need to bring a certain recognition to our people that lives matter,” she continued. “Our young people need to be aware of this. They need to know that lives matter. It is not simply enough to commit a horrendous act and drive off and go to sleep at night. That is not where we want to be as a people.”
Also weighing in on the plaintive pleas was Parliamentary Secretary, Merrick Richardson, who suggested that a committee be formed to address the tide of gun violence.
“I am going to beg of this House that we form a committee for addressing gun violence,” he said. “We need to determine how illegal guns are being imported; how they are being accessed so easily and, more importantly, what is the reason for their importation, Madam Speaker.”
“I am not going to be silly in standing here and thinking that a committee would be the only solution to the problem, Madam Speaker. Solving this gun problem is going to take the entire community. It is going to take an entire island to start to get to the bottom of this plight. The entire island needs to get on board,” Mr. Richardson said.
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Anguilla
NCBA SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZE ENTERPRISE LOAN LAUNCH – The Anguillian Newspaper – The Weekly Independent Paper of Anguilla


The National Commercial Bank of Anguilla (NCBA) has formally launched its Small and Medium-size Enterprise (SME) Loan campaign.
The launch, on Tuesday night, May 9th, 2023, took place at the Anguilla Music Academy. It followed five weeks of training in SME business financial literacy, and the NCBA CEO, Mrs. Sharmaine Vaughan, was excited to introduce the loan product at the tail-end of the training exercises.
Following a prayer by Mrs. Samantha Derrick, a disclaimer was presented by the CEO relative to the nature of the loan package, which provided a list of conditions which the Bank would not be liable for.
“This evening we are very happy to present our small business loan product,” the CEO said, as she formally opened the event. “This product is very much needed for our small and medium-sized business segment of customers.”
Mrs. Vaughan provided some context regarding the economic environment in which the loan programme would be executed.
She said because Anguilla had gone through some severe economic shocks, it is more reason that the Bank should cater to the needs of small and medium-sized businesses.
She noted that the failure of the two legacy banks in 2016 – National Bank of Anguilla and Caribbean Commercial Bank, had made a significant impact on the local economy. She observed that this impact still continues because the adverse debt levels still exist.
In addition, she mentioned that Hurricane Irma in 2017 also had a crucial impact on Anguilla’s economy, and, a more pronounced economic drawback came as a result of COVID-19, when the economy came to a virtual halt.
She said the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war also continues to impact the island.
“When you look at the disruption of the supply chain and the levels of inflation that affect us today, we see that economies, in general, are being impacted,” she said.
According to the Bank CEO, as a result of all these adversities we are experiencing an increased cost of living, and in particular she referred to the resent SME sessions. She said that the factor of the cost of living was evident in the discussions during the sessions.
She said the sessions dealt heavily with the importance of SME’s.
“When we look at global numbers in terms of World Bank 2022, SMEs represent 90% of all businesses globally. In the Caribbean region, according to CDB, a 2021 report stated that SMEs represent 70% to 85% of all Caribbean businesses,” Mrs. Vaughan said. “This is a significant sector which represents 50% of our employment numbers. So, SMEs constitute a sector that requires the necessary support and assistance for its continued growth and survival.”
“How do we plan to assist the SME’s so that they can grow?” she said. “We start with Financial Management Training. We have just come out of a five-week training programme where we have equipped small business owners and medium-sized business owners with the tools required to run their businesses successfully.”
The CEO promised that the Bank will continue to run similar training sessions, provide one-on-one advice, and mentor small and medium-sized business owners on an on-going basis. She projected that in another three months a similar workshop will be held.
During the launch, the CEO introduced the five presenters who facilitated the workshop sessions. They had been drawn from the Bank’s executive staff members.
Certificates were issued to those graduates who participated in the Financial Literacy Workshops for Small and Medium-sized businesses, and a few of the graduates were given the opportunity to testify how the training benefitted them.
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Anguilla
ANGUILLA CYCLISTS PLACE TOP IN ST. MARTIN CYCLE MEET – The Anguillian Newspaper – The Weekly Independent Paper of Anguilla



Anguillian cyclists and supporters were in the neighbouring island of French St. Martin for the Grand Prix Sound Master Bicycle Race on Sunday 7th May, 2023.
A total of 28 cyclists in the open access category took part in this grueling cycling challenge. The race was a 7 lap circuit race of 10 kilometers, amounting to a total of 70 kilometers and a total elevation of 642 meters.
The weight of the Anguillian contingency was felt as Delroy Carty secured 1st place, followed by fellow Anguillian Daren Carty in 2nd place.
Several up-and-coming cyclists from Anguilla did extremely well with Carvin Proctor placing 11th, Anguilla Cycling Association (ACA) President, Terone Hodge-Carty, placing 12th, Allyndel Sylvester placing 13th and Zuri Wilkes placing 15th.
Public Relations Officer Derick Carty gave kudos to those Anguillian cyclists who competed in the difficult race and to those who completed it.
The ACA has extended special thanks to all the supporting members, the Government of Anguilla and Mr. Roy Romney, the owner of the Excellence 2 Ferry.
“To our sponsors, we cannot thank you enough, as we look forward in partnering with in future cycling endeavors,” the ACA said.
The next cycle races are scheduled for Sunday 14th May, 2023 in South Hill for the South Hill Community Fun Relay Race; and the Anguilla Day Race on Sunday21st May, 2023.
Persons seeking more information can visit the ACA Instagram and Facebook platforms at “anguillacycling”.
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Underneath Part 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “honest use” for functions akin to criticism, remark, information reporting, instructing, scholarship, and analysis. Honest use is a use permitted by copyright statute that may in any other case be infringing.”
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