Submitted by Richard Petko

These pages have been inundated with comments concerning the Welcome Stamp (WS). I don’t wish to disparage the concept (with all respect to PLT), but the notion that Barbados can earn new amounts of foreign exchange from it or transition to a long-stay tourism/work model as opposed to regular tourism model are completely unrealistic.

The first point I wish to stress is the Welcome Stamp is no more than a 1 year tourist visa. A visa that costs $2000 USD for singles and $3000 USD for families. I mention these amounts because they have become a sore point for most of the people I have met.

As a foreigner living in Barbados I have had contact with over 20 WS families and a handful of WS singles. Why did they come here? The families arrived from Canada/USA/UK because they wanted their children to experience face to face schooling. In September private schools in Barbados offered this. As well there was a sense of adventure the families were looking for; but the over-riding reason was education. The singles I have met came for a year of fun and adventure. They did not know what the future would hold in their countries, so they decided to take the plunge.

We are now 9 months into the welcome stamp experience and I can share my observations of why the program serves a purpose but will never lead to an economic transformation.

Regarding the families, every single one is planning to go home as in-school learning is a reality in Canada, UK and the USA. In fact, I already know of 2 families that have left Barbados for Miami since January 6th when this government decided to shut down face to face schools. They now have their children attending classes in Florida. I know of only one family that is contemplating staying here another year, the other 19 are on their way out. Most of them have enjoyed their time here, but the reality is Covid pushed their decision and without Covid life shall return to normal for them.

When it comes to the singles, adventure brought them here, but after 1 year the adventure streak has passed. I feel this cohort may be one that the Welcome Stamp attracts in the future, but again for only one-year timelines.
Both cohorts tend to have the same negative experiences in regards to the program and living in Barbados.

The cost of the WS Program

It didn’t take long for these people to realize you can come to Barbados and stay for 6 months on a tourist stamp for free; then can extend your tourist visa for 6 months at a cost of $100 – http://www.immigration.gov.bb/pages/Extension.aspx. Needless to say all of them felt ripped-off by the cost of the program. I do not think the program can continue at its present cost because the word is out. Not to mention other jurisdictions also now have similar programs at lower price points. Now that a welcome stamp person knows they can extend a visa for $100 there is no reason to pay for the welcome stamp.

  • Other laments that I have heard, which are familiar to us all.
  • Cost of food
  • Cost of clothing
  • Hassles with customs department – One individual broke their iPhone, shipped it back to USA for warranty repair and had to argue for 3 weeks with customs when the phone was returned to not have to pay import duties on it.
  • For the singles, 4-5 nightspots. When accustomed to Las Vegas/Miami nightlife most places including Barbados come up short
  • Bad roads and lighting. I know of numerous women and men who simply refuse to drive the roads especially at night. This is an issue they don’t face in their home countries.

These may seem trivial but they are not. Not every welcome stamp family is one of millionaires. They are middle class families renting small houses on the south coast and a shopping trip to Price Smart is not a frivolous event for them. For the singles, breaking an iPhone or a iMac and then trying to find a replacement or have it fixed is quite crucial to their personal and business life.

The main selling point of Barbados is no doubt the weather, but warm weather and nice beaches cannot over-come major living issues. We have to remember Barbados is not in competition with just the Caribbean, it is in competition with Texas or Florida or California. People from the northern climates next year post-Covid will look at Tampa Bay or San Diego as a place to live for a year. In those locales they will have world class roads, shopping, food choice and entertainment options aplenty. For someone from Boston they will also not have to worry about visa applications or fees.

The Welcome Stamp is an idea that needs to be reviewed and optimized. If tweaked correctly It can offer a marginal stream of people and revenues to Barbados, but it is no magical potion to bring Barbados hundreds of millions of dollars.

113 responses to “Welcome Stamp: good idea but not Elixir”


  1. @PLT

    Are you serious?

  2. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @SS
    “I love Richard Petko, but I nominate him to be Covid19 death number 29 hopefully before the end of today.”
    Really?


  3. Wasted nearly 13 years after the previous 41 wasted DBLP years of keeping young people stagnated and now have to play catch up.

  4. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Hal Austin February 18, 2021 2:35 PM
    “Are you serious?”
    ++++++++++++++++
    Just watch me…


  5. You go Peter!


  6. @Traveler February 18, 2021 1:41 PM

    All good.


  7. lawd…just saw Donville in a video throwing down a wicked Red Plastic Bag ragga ragga soca dance, while cooking a meal, he looks good too, glad for him.


  8. @peterlawrencethompson February 18, 2021 2:28 PM

    All good.


  9. @PLT

    OK.

    @ Northern Observer

    @SS
    “I love Richard Petko, but I nominate him to be Covid19 death number 29 hopefully before the end of today.”
    Really?…(Quote)

    This is what we have to deal with on BU and the chairman remains as quiet as a dormouse. This has gone beyond a cheap laugh. It speaks to the mind of a mature woman. She needs help.


  10. @NorthernObserver February 18, 2021 2:33 PM

    Good.

    I spent a good part of my working like teaching both Bajans and foreigners that “over and away” is NEVER EVER the same as “home” but if you are flexible, if you are adaptable, if you are open minded, then over and away has some advantages [but some difficulties too] and is worth a try, whether that over and away is Barbados, next door in St. Vincent or in the countries of the great white north.

    Northern, please stop this afternoon’s snow storm, Little Johnnie needs to get home from work safely.

    Lol!


  11. PLT 2:28

    Maybe we are to reconsider our earlier comment.

    Where has a national level of high technology transfer so occurred.

    Certainly not when Intel, Corcom and others were here.

    To us this services idea at such scale and total dependence seems unworkable.


  12. @Hal Austin February 18, 2021 3:06 PM “She needs help.”

    Why don’t you show up and help me?

    Are you even capable of helping even yourself?

    Stupseee!

    Was I not reprimanding Richard Petko for suggesting the Belarus solution to us? Did I not point out that Belarus has had twice the death rate of Barbados? If we go the Belarus way, then Barbados will need to have, in fact WILL HAVE 56 deaths instead of 28. And if 28 more people will die then why not Richard? Is his life any more precious than any of the 28 people who have died? Is his life more valuable than that of the nurse? Than that of the 9 year old? Than that of my multiple relatives who are working on the front line?

    If any life is valuable, then all lives are valuable.

    If other people’s lives are of little or no value, then no life is of value.

    Here endeth the lesson.


  13. @WURA-War-on-U February 18, 2021 3:03 PM “lawd…just saw Donville in a video throwing down a wicked Red Plastic Bag ragga ragga soca dance, while cooking a meal, he looks good too, glad for him.”

    Saw that too.

    But it looks like a much younger Donville, maybe 10 or 15 years younger.

  14. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Pachamama February 18, 2021 3:22 PM
    I think that tech skill transfers take place between individuals, and in the case of Intel and others most of those individuals who benefitted from that tech transfer subsequently left Barbados and sought their fortunes elsewhere. My elder brother worked at Intel for a single summer while in sixth form. He had intended to study architecture at university, but then he went into computer science and has had a very productive career, currently as a very senior operating systems engineer at a Silicon Valley industry leader with $9 billion in annual revenue. So he benefited, but Barbados not so much.

    My schemes may indeed be unworkable, but the difference between then and now is that now the core skillset is remote work delivery, a suite of technologies that dis not exist when my brother was at Intel in the summer of 1971. In any case I’m going to try.


  15. Looks like he just had a haircut, that’s all.


  16. “He had intended to study architecture at university, but then he went into computer science and has had a very productive career, ”

    a win win…no losing…

    DBLP wasted 54 years of Black lives, that in itself is a crime.

  17. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @SS
    you mean that little bit of snow in the city? Here, it is piled 5ft on either side of the driveway. Spent the morning sorting through my maple tapping equipment, will get them in place by next week. I am sure the few inches the City will get, will not cause havoc. Then again, the folks around here call the members of Urbania, citidiots, and when you see some of what they do on snowmobiles, in ice huts, and in the summer on lakes, it is difficult to find fault with their terminology.

  18. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @SS
    a reprimand is one thing. You went well beyond a reprimand.


  19. Jamaica Nice
    with good music
    and better collie

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RyGPncrFG-M


  20. @PLT 2:28
    Agree with your vision, but we must also develop a workforce with the necessary skills if we want to use local talent. That is a missing piece of the plan.
    ‘The point is not so much for a few Americans to live here each earning a minimum $50k USD salary for a year”

    I also want to add that a US person earning US $50K/ annum is not a good candidate for such a visa. $100K minimum.


  21. @NorthernObserver February 18, 2021 3:50 PM “Spent the morning sorting through my maple tapping equipment, will get them in place by next week.”

    Happy tapping.

    A friend sent me some homemade. I am treasuring it.


  22. @ Traveler February 18, 2021 11:27 AM

    Thank you very much for your fair and balanced assessment of our island.

    @ peterlawrencethompson February 18, 2021 2:28 PM

    PLT is intellectually three light years ahead of everyone else on the island. No wonder our Supreme Leader has quietly buried the COVID19 Council. After all, with PLT she has the best advisor who delivers ideas for free.


  23. PLT

    Very well! But at which point in this cycle, as outlined by you, would we be able to drive technological development as owners, throwing off the mantle of perennial service station mentality which comes with that, in circumstances where services are so susceptible to a downward spiral in value added terms.


  24. No worries about the covid remark. If I catch it I have a 99.99999% chance of full recovery.

    PLT I see your point and it is grand. But to get those 10,000 nomads to come here is 2000 a year for 5 years. Don’t think it is happening with the current system in place.
    The main issue is where are the 10,000 people they would hire. As much as the government lauds the education system here it is not as robust as they say. The entire 11 plus concept is archaic and leads to children being siloed into their respective middle/high school which has its limitations both real and perceived. This concept of Harrison college and Queens being the top high schools just doesn’t exist in canada and usa. All schools are good and all work to develop kids of all abilities and they don’t pigeonhole them into a classroom based on the spelling and math skills from the age of 11.
    These WS people are not going to come here for 1 year to mentor or train an assistant. If they need an employee they want them readily available.
    Not to mention if they actually like the quality of employees and then say “lets open a branch office here with 5 people” well then the WS person has to legally get a work permit and then try to open a business here and from first hand knowledge this is yet another one of Barbados government major letdowns. Incorporating a company here, dealing with Caipo and opening a corporate bank account will quickly dampen the enthusiasm this WS worker/entrepreneur may have.
    It could be a chicken and egg issue. I think get this influx of WS talent you need good roads, street lights, easy government services, easy banking and then you can think about having WS people rave back to head office how they should setup a branch here in lovely Barbados.


  25. @cuhdear why dont you look at all the amazing countries that imposed useless senseless lockdowns to try and stop a cold virus. UK usa canada italy spain Argentina Peru the list goes on. All have 5-7 times the death rate of people “with” covid..
    So yes I shall stick to using Belarus and even Sweden as examples because they kept their economy open and schools open and society open and let this flu pass through naturally as it should and each country is well down the list of per capita with covid deaths.
    Cheers


  26. @PLT

    You are correct on the service focus and opportunities it can offer Bajans.

    I live it daily and have mentioned before that I use Pakistani and Algerian freelancers from Fiverr, Upwork (could easily have been a Bajan service provider) and took courses on Udemy. These are multi million dollar new age services companies that prove the model works and don’t need any blessings from doubting Thomases.. My service just got accepted in South Africa and this overseas Bajan, me, is sitting 5000 miles away and never set foot there. Never. All online / via Zoom and $$ USD flowing

    I have been lamenting my fellow bajans about our unexplainable inertia, lack of imagination and massa kiss ass attitude for years. Now we are in an era where the playing field is more level and a bright Bajan kid (I give up on the old heads) with a computer and internet access can be just as savvy as a kid in Japan or the USA but we still doubt ourselves. What’s up with that eh?? And the thing is not much investment capital is needed.

    THERE IS NO EXCUSE

    LETS GO BARBADOS!!


  27. @ Pachamama February 18, 2021 5:11 PM

    Belarus also has a large IT industry. At least before the recent unrest. If this is possible in a dictatorship, then even more so in a one-party democracy with a Supreme Leader.


  28. And this is another reason i can never like politicians, tens of millions are at risk of dying.

    “It’s a tale as old as America, practically: a wealthy politician who builds a career trashing elites gets caught doing something decadent and ill-advised in the middle of a catastrophe affecting their constituents.

    This time, that politician is Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), a staunch conservative and Trump loyalist, who was photographed on a plane headed to Cancun, Mexico while millions in his state have experienced freezing weather without power and heat for days, during a severe winter storm. Residents and hospitals are also reportedly facing water shortages, and millions of Texans are under a boil water advisory. At least 24 people have died across the South as a result of the extreme weather, according to multiple outlets.

    A photo of Cruz at the Houston airport went viral late Wednesday, and multiple outlets including Fox News, MSNBC, CNN, the Associated Press, and The Dallas Morning News have since confirmed that it was, in fact, the senator traveling on a flight to Mexico. Fox reported that a Republican source said, “The photos speak for themselves.”


  29. @Richard Petko

    When you start talking about Covid19 as a cold, as a flu I cease having any conversations about Covid19 with you. When you raise Sweden as an example which Barbados should follow I done.

    Sweden has had 1,242 Covid19 deaths per million people; and 61,841infections per million.
    Barbados has had 101 Covid19 deaths per million people; and 9,204 infections per million.

    You and others who do not live in Barbados may be comfortable with a Barbados death rate which is 12 times higher than it is. Wunna may be comfortable with 1,242 Bajans dead from Covid19. I am not.

    And yet you and those people are uncomfortable with me wishing a hasty Covid19 death on you.

    May you be Covid19 death number 30.


  30. O Jesus Christ!

    Even under covid Bajans at home still promoting tensions between one class in Barbados and their step children abroad, economic refugees in the main.

    But the situation is worse than that. There are Bajans all over the world who have for centuries been ignored by every institution in Barbados. Panama is one example.

    Except when these same entities want something.

    All these agencies and people promoting tensions between two classes of Bajans, as they see reality, generally have no sustained critique for the White elites with the jackboot on our necks. But kicking Black ass seems always in vogue.


  31. Interesting.

    Looks like the folks with children will be heading to Florida.


  32. […] on February 17, 2021 by Barbados Underground Blog – Submitted by Richard […]


  33. JohnFebruary 18, 2021 10:07 PM

    Will you stop bringing US politics into every discussion? Yes, we know you still love Trump. We get that. We know. You love Trump! Okay?!!

    Enough now.


  34. Lawson…just saw a video of the guy who drank the bottle of alcohol straight up, he looks right as rain, probably didn’t feel a thing.


  35. TOURISM NOSEDIVE
    Officials still ‘very confident’ despite 93% fall-off
    Long-stay visitor arrivals to Barbados plummeted by 93 per cent in January, but tourism officials are still optimistic the industry, which has taken a beating from the COVID-19 pandemic, will rebound.
    Chief executive officer of the Barbados Hotel & Tourism Association (BHTA), Senator Rudy Grant, painted the gloomy picture of the situation during a media conference yesterday, revealing that hotel occupancy had fallen as low as six per cent in January.
    However, he shared BHTA’s chairman Geoffrey Roach’s hopeful outlook for a revival of the industry.
    Grant attributed the dramatic drop in visitor numbers to developments in Barbados’ major source markets because of the pandemic, but based on reports from tour operators and other travel industry representatives in Barbados’ main source markets, he indicated the desire for travel to Barbados was still high.
    He also suggested the availability of a vaccine should help to restore confidence in travel. Given these factors, the BHTA executive said: “We are very confident that we will see a resurgence of the tourism sector.”
    Record arrivals
    In 2019, Barbados recorded more than 700 000 visitor arrivals by air and 850 000 by sea, making it a record year for tourism performance. Until the COVID-19 pandemic struck and brought the tourism industry worldwide to its knees, local tourism officials were predicting another bumper year for 2020.
    Grant said Government’s Barbados Employment and Sustainable Transformation Plan (BEST) had given businesses in the tourism sector a lifeline that enabled the retention of hotel workers.
    Noting that the programme focused on the re-engagement of workers and there was also a business transformation component, the BHTA’s CEO said: “We believe that the utilisation of the BEST programme will enable those businesses which need some financial support to be able to make it through at this critical time.”
    Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley conceded Monday the BEST plan needed to be “refined”, and yesterday Grant said: “We think that it is a lifeline that can be properly utilised with some adjustments.”
    He pointed out not all of the hotels were participants in the programme and said the current hiatus in tourism business should provide an opportunity for hoteliers to pay attention to their plant to ensure that the hotels were “fit for purpose” when the tourism industry resurges.
    Roach said it was important for Barbados to look to the future, adding that while the island had enjoyed good brand equity through the years, “We have to ensure that we step up our game up as much as possible to keep Barbados as one of the key destinations that people would want to travel to”.
    He said this must be done considering the competition expected from other destinations when tourism travel resumes worldwide.
    (GC)

    Source: Nation


  36. “People from the northern climates next year post-Covid will look at Tampa Bay or San Diego as a place to live for a year. In those locales they will have world class roads, shopping, food choice and entertainment options aplenty. For someone from Boston they will also not have to worry about visa applications or fees.”

    In Florida they will likely be able to prove they are Covid-19 free with a “spit test” rather than an intrusive and unpleasant PCR test from a throat swab.

    Fred Turner, CEO of Curative, a US testing company, says reliance on high CT count PCR tests which produce too many false positives (according to Dr. Fauci any CT at 35 or over is useless because of the high false positives) will result in “everlasting lockdowns”. He is looking for approval from the FDA for more widespread use of his company’s spit test to diagnose Covid-19 cases. Currently, the FDA only approves Curative’s spit test for cases which are symptomatic or which have been symptomatic within the two weeks prior to the test. However, the state of Florida allows the spit test to be used on both symptomatic and asymptomatic subjects with no limitations.

    The Insanity of the PCR Testing Saga
    Analysis by Dr. Joseph Mercola

    SNIP

    Testing for Dead Viruses Will Ensure Everlasting Lockdowns
    To circle back to the Curative PCR test, the company argues that the test is accurate when it comes to detecting active infection, and as CEO Fred Turner told Buzzfeed:19

    “If you’re screening for a return to work and you’re picking up everyone who had COVID two months ago, no one’s going to return to work. If you want to detect active COVID, what the ‘early’ study shows is that Curative is highly effective at doing that.”

    Again, this has to do with the fact that the Curative spit test has a sensitivity resembling that of a nasopharyngeal PCR set at a CT of 30. The lower CT count narrows the pool of positive results to include primarily those with higher viral loads and those who are more likely to actually carry live virus. This is a good thing. What the FDA wants Curative to do is to widen that net so that more noninfectious individuals can be labeled as a “case.”

    In an email to Buzzfeed, Dr. Michael Mina, an epidemiologist at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, stated that using a CT of 45 is “absolutely insane,” because at that magnification, you may be looking at a single RNA molecule, whereas “when people are sick and are contagious, they literally can have 1,000,000,000,000x that number.”20

    Mina added that such a sensitive PCR test “would potentially detect someone 35 days post-infection who is fully recovered and cause that person to have to enter isolation. That’s crazy and it’s not science-based, it’s not medicine-based and it’s not public health-oriented.”21

    While the FDA has issued a warning not to use the Curative spit test on asymptomatic people, Florida has dismissed the warning and will continue to use the test on symptomatic and asymptomatic individuals alike. Only Miami-Dade County is reconsidering how it is using the test, although a definitive decision has yet to be announced.22

    The Lower the CT, the Greater the Accuracy

    While the FDA claims high sensitivity (meaning higher CT) is required to ensure we don’t end up with asymptomatic spreaders in our communities, as reviewed above, this risk is exceedingly small. We really need to stop panicking about the possibility of healthy people killing others. It’s not a sane trend, as detailed in “The World Is Suffering from Mass Delusional Psychosis.”

    According to an April 2020 study23 in the European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases, to get 100% confirmed real positives, the PCR test must be run at just 17 cycles. Above 17 cycles, accuracy drops dramatically.

    By the time you get to 33 cycles, the accuracy rate is a mere 20%, meaning 80% are false positives. Beyond 34 cycles, your chance of a positive PCR test being a true positive shrinks to zero.

    More:
    https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2021/02/19/covid-pcr-test-fraud.aspx?ui=bb4dacf56d364c8aecefb22217091c77d2154762c68fd258d557a18be6f6af77&sd=20100827&cid_source=dnl&cid_medium=email&cid_content=art1HL&cid=20210219_HL2&mid=DM809083&rid=1087929775


  37. I am sure the peasants were hopeful and waiting on sunshine while Noah and family watched from the Ark…Did it work out for those peasants??

    Frog in a warming pot syndrome is a thing., but hey that’s why we are at a point of reckoning, no longer protected by easy loans, that separates leaders who can see around the corner and have the balls to pivot and lead versus those who just pontificate, postulate, politic, project and ponder all the while showing no REAL progress. At the end of the day the results WILL show.

    How could anyone possibly think Tourism will bounce back to a pre-Covid model?.

    #PromotingBrainDrain


  38. The mortgages of these talking heads have their salaries paid from the sector. What do you expect them to say?


  39. David that is true

    But this is exactly what needs to change

    Did our journalists challenge this obviously ridiculous statement in light of the obvious reality? Have they stepped up lead and demand more from our leaders and industry captains?

    Has Mia and her cabinet really articulated what our pivot looks like so the talking heads don’t have to make these obviously ridiculous and impractical statements given the leadership vacuum on the question of where do we go from here?

    Look we can either make excuses as usual or get the required job done. Covid and the resulting nationalism in G20 countries with vaccine hoarding and closed borders shows there is no room for 2nd place, also rans and perennial beggars. It’s black and white you either have excuses or results.

    We still don’t get it??? The ONLY way it changes now is with strong leadership. No two ways about that. SOMEONE HAS TO LEAD BARBADOS OUT IF THIS. We will make mistakes but SOMEONE HAS TO LEAD.

    In the meanwhile I URGE my fellow Bajans to learn how to develop and monetize content to earn some extra USD. It possible


  40. @Bajanabroad

    To be fair in this forum and even in the traditional, there has been and continues to be voluminous commentary re our over dependence on tourism.


  41. They’ll maybe – maybe not get it that saving their sorry dependent lives is more important than go nowhere tourism..no one really cares if they do, they’ve wasted decades.

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=FaKug-4xcoE


  42. For those of you – especially Tron – who still do not get it. Here is an article which appears to be gaining traction even in places whose local economies have benefited from tourism.

    https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2021/2/18/it-is-time-to-end-extractive-tourism


  43. I have said from the jump that these liars and frauds who push the dependency, racist, slaver tourism, should all BE IN PRISON…they are evil, no good trash…the whole of them especially the shitheads in the parliament…told yall Barbados is advertised as a racist country, it truly is, where the scum of the earth can parade as tourists and pretend to the detriment both social and economic of the Black population…the same way they use any and every excuse to criminalize, demorialize and destroy Black lives, using the marijuana

    “Capitalist forces have convinced the increasingly overworked middle-class labour force in the West and elsewhere that to “relax”, it needs a vacation abroad with all comforts provided. As a result, it is willing to pay significant sums of money to be mass transported south and east to enjoy a week of leisure at the expense of local communities who suffer from the abuse of their land and resources by tourism corporations and their local partners.

    Quite literally, whole relationships between people, and between people and nature are shaped by the need to allow the paying tourist customer to do and be whatever they desire. It is a vicious circle where capitalist labour exploitation, consumerism and wealth extraction work to produce an incredibly destructive kind of mass tourism.

    If there was ever a time to reconsider the tourism industry, it would be now. The COVID-19 pandemic offers us the unique opportunity to reflect on the ugly reality behind our exotic vacations and break the cycle of exploitation. This would take not only reforming the tourist industry but also overhauling our labour systems.

    The many harms of extractive tourism

    The tourism industry, and the governments that welcome foreign revenue, thrive on the argument that local livelihoods depend on tourism and insinuate that millions of people will be reduced to abject poverty without it. But a closer examination of how large-scale tourism clusters function reveals who the true winners and losers of mass tourism are.”


  44. I know it still has to be broken down for some, although they’ve heard me rant about this for 8 STRAIGHT YEARS..

    when they came up with that shite about “just beyond your imagination”……..yeah, i saw it in NYC….where a lot of those fraud tourists like to pretend, they can’t get through 24 hours without pretending dumb shit….well, if ya want to be racist, hating black people, belittling them, being violent to them because ya still see them as slaves and telling them how much they need tourism to survive or they will starve, come to Barbados, just beyond ya imagination….

    but…KARMA has it now that the same fckers are starving themselves….

    and that has literally DESTROYED THE ISLAND…socially and economically.


  45. Great post by TLSN.
    Must print and read.


  46. Anything devised by criminals, racists, enslavers, thieves, murderers rapists and allround lowlifes in the 1700s….as tourism was in Barbados…CAN’T BE GOOD FOR BLACK POPULATIONS….ya would have to be a slave from the 1700s to think it could ever end well for Black people….now yall know why i call them…yardfowls, wickum etc Slaves.


  47. Many Welcome Stampers staying
    MANY PEOPLE on the Barbados’ Welcome Stamp have chosen to remain on the island despite recent developments related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
    This is according to chief executive officer of the Barbados Hotel & Tourism Association (BHTA), Senator Rudy Grant, who suggested that even with Barbados’ current COVID-19 challenges and developments in major Barbados tourism source markets, many of them who chose to remain here might have done so based on the fact that the country has been doing “reasonably well with the management of COVID-19”.
    The Barbados Welcome Stamp Programme, introduced last July, targeted potential long-stay visitors and families interested in working from Barbados for up to 12 months. Hundreds responded to the novel idea, with close to 2 000 applications having been received and nearly 500 approved by last November. Interest surrounded the fact that Barbados had at the time recorded a comparatively low number of COVID-19 cases and under ten deaths.
    Since that time, however,
    countries such as Canada and Britain, key source markets from which many of those on the Welcome Stamp came, introduced travel restrictions that saw some people ending their stay here prematurely.
    ‘Not as big’
    Barbados’ more stringent COVID-19 protocols and measures imposed as cases began to spike and deaths increased, were also factors that were expected to impact the programme.
    However, on Thursday, Grant said all reports to the BHTA from its members indicated the fall-out was not as big as expected.
    In contrast, the BHTA executive conceded that the national pause instituted by Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley on February 3 and recently extended to February 28, had dealt a hard blow to hotels offering staycations. Grant said because of Barbadians’ response to staycation offers, some hotels had been enjoying occupancies as high as 70 per cent.
    Speaking during a media briefing that day, Grant explained: “What is happening
    now is that component is not there because of the new measures that have been put in place.” But he said “the expectation is that once we get through this period and we are able once again to reopen, we will see a continued focus on the staycation component.”
    (GC)

    Source: Nation

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