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The following is a Press Release from the Coalition of Co-operatives Coalition of Co-operatives and Concerned Citizens in relation to the recent FTC ruling – Blogmaster

Coalition of Concerned Co-operatives and Citizens
PRESS RELEASE

17 September 2022

The Coalition of Concerned Cooperatives is shocked at the decision by the Fair Trading Commission to grant an interim rate increase to the Barbados Light & Power Company three days before the substantive two-week Rate Hearing is due to commence.

In addition to the unfortunate message that this decision sends to the general public, and to intervenors in the substantive Hearings, about the Commission’s seeming predisposition towards the Company’s application, we are also particularly displeased that the Commission has dismissed, without comment, the position raised by the Coalition in writing to the Fair Trading Commission, that the Laws of Barbados – via the Utilities Regulations Act Chapter 282, in Section 15 (3) specifically directs that:

(3) The Commission shall not grant a request for a review by the same service provider
more than once in any year.

In our opinion, this clear stipulation in the Law restricts the BLPC from submitting an additional Interim rate application within the same year, after having submitted their substantive application. Surely, the acceptance of the BLPC ‘interim rate review’ therefore breaches the Act.

We continue to await a suitable explanation from the Commission as to how they could have ignored this clear stipulation in our Law.

We are furthermore concerned that, whereas the Act makes no provision for any special category of Rate Hearing such as an ‘Interim Rate Increase’, the Commission in its ruling, went to long, rambling, lengths, to accommodate this request from the Company, citing overseas precedents that would have been based on completely different laws.

At the same time, the Commission has completely ignored and dismissed our position which is a direct and unambiguous extract from the Laws of Barbados that apply directly to these Rate Hearings.

Additionally, the decision to arbitrarily award 50% of BLPC’s request, appears to be based solely on subjective information provided by the Company. It clearly lacks the kind of scrutiny that is mandated by the Act, and which will apply in the substantive Rate Hearing scheduled to commence on Wednesday.

The records show that whereas BLPC paid less than $10 million per year in dividends to shareholders before the last rate increase, this increased to nearly $50 Million annually since Emera took control of the company. As a result, some $538 Million have been extracted from BLPC since the last rate hearing.

How this company can now claim ‘cash flow difficulties’ and be accommodated with an ‘interim rate increase’ on consumers, is difficult to assimilate from the decision given by the FTC. We fully expect that Emera will simply increase their annual dividends extractions accordingly, since this matter has not been addressed in the ruling.

Also, to the extent that this so-called ‘Interim Rate’ has not been back dated, we are concerned that its only impact will be to prejudice the substantive Hearing with the preconception that the Company’s case is already being supported by the FTC.

The wisdom of the stipulation in our Law that only one rate application be entertained in any single year becomes quite apparent.

The Coalition calls on the FTC to urgently reconsider this flawed decision, and we reserve our rights in the matter.

Trevor Browne
Chairman
Coalition of Concerned Cooperatives



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108 responses to “Cooperative Coalition Shocked at FTC Ruling”


  1. @ Artax
    At one stage, the BL&P, trading as Light and Power Holdings, had 63% locally owned shares, with the
    remaining 37% shares being owned by an American company,
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    It was the reverse – about 37% local.
    …and BL&P and Light and Power Holdings are/were two separate entities.


  2. The supply of Electricity is an essential service.


  3. John A

    With respect neither deal was ever as simple as that.


  4. I would like to make a correction here. Now I….Lynette Holder….

  5. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Pacha….saw a speech where western countries are being urged to become more civilized, which would mean ending the savagery associated with colonialism…..


  6. Waru
    That is impossible. Has history not proven that these barbarians can only be?

    Separately, we note that Charlie has inherited one trillion in looted wealth.

    Yet, the bible-reading asshole here defends White criminals like Elizabeth under the ignorance that them and a stinking god are one.

  7. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    “That is impossible. Has history not proven that these barbarians can only be?”

    it really is wishful thinking, that savagery runs way too deep in those who are control freaks and believe they are entitled to control our earth and the people on it…

    there are certain people only useful for avoiding like the plague, politicians, their imps, pimps, fowls, and the Slaves are No. 1…..they cannot be anything but, that’s like asking barbaric colonials to change their ways…never going to happen, the hypocrisy in the former runs too deep, and they are not worth much of anything, but to hear them tell it, you would believe someone needs them….. that’s why i dismiss them as unworthy of my time, energy or attention…tell them what i gotta say and 9 times out of 10, they don’t like it, but tough.

    Charles was bound to inherit a lump sum….do you think that would assuage any future greed…

  8. 🌍 Magnificent a.k.a Magno – Yu Heard Formula: C₂₁H₃₀O₂ IUPAC ID: (−)-(6aR,10aR)-6,6,9-trimethyl- 3-pentyl-6a,7,8,10a-tetrahydro- 6H-benzo[c]chromen-1-ol [[[ONE LOVE ONE WORLD ♡ ♥💕❤😘 🌍]]] Avatar
    🌍 Magnificent a.k.a Magno – Yu Heard Formula: C₂₁H₃₀O₂ IUPAC ID: (−)-(6aR,10aR)-6,6,9-trimethyl- 3-pentyl-6a,7,8,10a-tetrahydro- 6H-benzo[c]chromen-1-ol [[[ONE LOVE ONE WORLD ♡ ♥💕❤😘 🌍]]]

    Gospel 📖👩💭🧔🏽‍♀️✝ | 🙏📖👄 | 📕✝ House 🏠
    Sounds of Blackness
    The Pressure (Frankie Knuckles Classic Mix (With Intro))

    My back is against the wall more bills than money to pay
    But I know just who who to call on
    When I need relief I pray to help me fight
    The pressure, the pressure, the pressure, pressure of the world.
    The pressure, the pressure, the pressure pressure of the world.
    The pressure, the pressure, the pressure pressure of the world.
    Playin’ on the tension and your weakness are addictions,
    That lure your mind You can fight it. You can win
    For your deliverance, just bow your head and pray.
    To help you fight the pressure, the pressure, the pressure
    Pressure of the world.
    We all have our burdens to carry.
    I know when mine get to heavy.
    He’s always there to bear the load
    Give me strength and comfort any time I need relief
    From the pressures of the world I just believe.

  9. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Pacha….gotta tell ya, as i said recently, the Slaves and bloodline traitors are our biggest THREAT…massive DANGER to Afrikan people, as they have been historically…..we see their UGLY mindsets every day, once they are identified, the rest is easy,,,,


  10. The evidence point to the Nordic countries being light years ahead of the rest of the world in implementing renewable energy. Should Barbados be developing a strategic relationship to benefit from their expertise?


  11. The blogmaster is having a read of this document which stresses the need for uncomplicated legislation and process to govern this emerging sector. Are we there yet?

    https://cor.europa.eu/en/engage/studies/Documents/local-energy-ownership.pdf


  12. A trillion in looted wealth spells GUILTY!

    You cannot keep the loot and claim innocence.

    Case closed.


  13. David
    You boys like to continually talk about the Nordic countries so lovingly. Wunna too love wunna White people.

    Don’t you see that these fuckers are on the leading edge of fascism? Have you not seen the fa-rightists they are electing.

    It is because of your mental disposition that these have been washed in the blood which makes them appear not to have been deeply involved in slavery.

    Is there not a contradiction. That countries deep in ice for nine months every year must teach us about alternative energy. Is this not mental slavery posed by you as a good idea?


  14. Far rightists

  15. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    “It is because of your mental disposition that these have been washed in the blood which makes them appear not to have been deeply involved in slavery.”

    upfront in our bloodlines, our cousins…..a LONG LIST OF THEM…

  16. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Pacha…..it’s so real, that if you look really closely, ya will also find traces of the Ottoman Empire.


  17. Waru
    It was the first globalization project. Everybody profited, except us of course. Though many modern day slaves would disagree on that last point.

  18. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Pacha…now we know why they never wanted to send genetic testing kits to the Caribbean….when i first got that reply, my immediate response was….WHAT YALL HIDING…..

    then to find out not too long after….DEM GOT NUFF TO HIDE….

  19. Critical Analyzer Avatar

    @Pachamama September 20, 2022 8:07 AM

    What is your definition of a far rightist? and a far leftist while you at it.


  20. Who’s getting carried away?

    His argument was spot on and that is ALL that I am interested in. Yours, on the the other hand, is not.

    I noticed at the end that his call was for an admission of the debt and symbolic reparations only.

    I don’t hold out hope for reparations. But I DO love shoving the debt in the white supremacist faces. All those who believe that they did it on their own and we should be grateful to the barbarians for “civilising” us will be getting a dose of reality.

    Smashing the myth of white supremacy to pieces is more valuable in the long run than money. It would set my people free, FINALLY!

    They were simply the best at being the worst, the worst thieves, the worst murderers, the worst savages.

    Nothing to be proud of at all.


  21. @Pacha

    The blogmaster mentioned the system governing effective RE implementation.


  22. Regulators are part of Government and Industry and whitewashing complaints is the usual MO.
    The remedy is make more complaints at the next level.
    Faith
    He Moves

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2mvruTLAVDY


  23. There is that man Franklyn again!

    Franklyn to challenge rate hike in court

    by COLVILLE MOUNSEY
    colvillemounsey@nationnews.com

    WITH THE HEARING on the controversial Barbados Light & Power application for a rate increase scheduled to begin tomorrow, there appears to be yet another twist in the tale.
    Former senator and trade unionist Caswell Franklyn has disclosed that he has sought legal counsel with the intent to challenge the Fair Trading Commission’s (FTC) decision to grant the utility company an interim rate increase.
    Constitution
    Franklyn is questioning the constitution of the commission, calling on the FTC to clear the air on whether the person acting as chairman on the rate hearing panel has the requisite qualifications for the post as outlined in the Fair Trading Commission Act.
    In the first schedule of the Act, it states that “the chairman shall be an attorney at law for at least ten years standing, or a person who has held high judicial office.”
    Deputy chairman Donley Carrington is chairing the panel hearing the application for the review of rates. This is because back in May this year, longstanding attorney at law Tammy Bryan recused herself as chairman in that matter only.
    “This is my position; you can only chair a Fair Trading Commission if you are an attorney with ten years of experience or you held high judicial office. He cannot act as chairman if he does not qualify to hold the position. I am speaking to an attorney . . . nobody not standing up, so I will stand up.
    “I am prepared to take this matter to court because I am one of the people affected. In fact, I pay two light bills and I am not prepared to stand by and let this happen. I am not going to be giving the Barbados Light & Power another cent more than they are entitled to,” said Franklyn.
    Last Saturday, the FTC announced that it was granting the utility company’s request for an interim rate hike, albeit 50 per cent of what was asked for in its 2021 application.
    However, chief executive officer of the FTC, Dr Marsha Atherley-Ikechi, said that Franklyn’s arguments were not in keeping with her understanding of the legislation. She explained that under the legislation
    the chairman is not required to preside over every panel, something which has been practised for years.
    Regulations
    “The issue here is very different in that the chairman still remains the chairman, she is just not the chair of that panel. Under utility regulations there are several panels. The chairman does not have to be on each of the panels and indeed she never was on each of the panel.
    “So the deputy chairman, who is not a lawyer, is now the chair of that panel but not the chairman of the commission. So they are two separate things, so I do not know that Mr Franklyn has grounds to contest it on that basis because there are provision in the legislation for panels in utility regulation and it does not specify that the chair of the panel has to be a lawyer,” explained Atherley-Ikechi.

    Source: Nation


  24. Put consumer first

    EDITORIAL

    NO ONE SHOULD expect that Barbadian households will be rejoicing following the Fair Trading Commission’s (FTC) decision to approve an interim electricity rate increase for the Barbados Light & Power Company Limited (BL& P).
    It is no secret that the high cost of living is something that consumers continue to struggle with, so any action that increases such cost would reasonably be opposed.
    This is even though, as is the case with electricity, Government temporarily reduced value added tax (VAT) levied on this source of energy from 17.5 per cent to 7.5 per cent for electricity charged up to the first 250 kilowatt hours of everyone’s residential electricity bill. This measure took effect on August 1. BL& P also announced that Barbadians benefited from a 17 per cent decrease in their electricity bills in August because of a reduced fuel clause adjustment.
    Negated
    The electric utility company attributed the lower fuel costs passed on to consumers to its pressing its more efficient Clean Energy Bridge plant at Trents, St Lucy, into service.
    However, it is undeniable that some of the electricity cost ease provided by Government’s reduced VAT take and BL& P’s new plant will be negated by the FTC’s decision, effective September 16, to approve the company’s electricity rate increase.
    This is even though the interim rate increase approved by the regulator is half of what BL& P applied for and considering that the FTC said no to the higher tariff being applied retroactively. The principle of the commission’s decision-making, as outlined in the written decision, was that it must attempt to set rates which enable an efficient utility to finance its functions by earning a reasonable rate of return.
    It also said that the rates must also be fair and reasonable to customers, but that the utility company is entitled to earn annually sufficient to finance its operations and earn a reasonable rate of return. The FTC’s decision to award an interim rate increase comes virtually on the eve of the substantive rate hearing, which is scheduled to start tomorrow at the Accra Beach Hotel.
    A lot has changed since the last rate hearing, held at the Lloyd Erskine Sandiford Centre in 2009. At that time, Canadian energy company Emera Inc., while the majority owner, did not
    control the shareholding of BL& P as it currently does. This means that millions of dollars in dividends leave Barbados destined for Canada, a fact that is likely to be argued during the hearing. In addition, in 2009 Barbados was not targeting becoming a fully renewable energy economy by 2030.
    Realities
    No one will envy the task ahead of the FTC and its experts in seeking to balance the needs of BL& P with those of cash-strapped Barbadians, while simultaneously considering the energy sector transition that includes independent power producers.
    Whatever decision the FTC makes should reflect all of these realities, including BL& P’s ability to deliver a reliable service, but in the end what is fairest for the consumer should matter the most.

    Source: Nation


  25. Not going to be prolix.
    Not going to repeat what I wrote earlier.
    75% of requested hit granted.
    Company and FTC claims ‘a win’.

    Anything longer than four sentences can be safely ignored.

  26. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Pacha…William, TLSN etc…..Kush Quarterly October – December published a little earlier today, when you have some time, check out the New Talk and other articles….

    oh….and don’t forget to check out the Fowl on the back page…..famous as ever..

  27. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Pacha…notice that there is a touch of Fanon.


  28. Waru
    Thanks much!

  29. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Most welcome..


  30. David

    And while we’re embroiled with things local, like you are want to so do.

    We beg to suggest that escalation in the Nato’-Russian conflict is seemingly inevitable given the current correlation of forces.

    Indeed, the contours of a global war are emerging both within the European theatre and the South China Sea.

    The wars may be starting in these places but the impacts of arsenals will be felt within the cities of Western belligerents as well. We kid you not!

    In these circumstances, we should expect Emera to return to the unFair Trading Commission for several more increases as oil prices approach 500 dollars a barrel.

    Putin has given a speech due for release today where it is expected that the SMO, Special Military Operation, will be upgraded to the self defense of the Russian Federation as the republics in the Donbass hold referenda by month’s end on their incorporation.

    In addition, Russia will vastly increase its troops from 200k to maybe 400k. The Nato trained Ukrainian Army is estimated at 600k.

    On the other front of this two-front war, the West continues to poke the dragon of the South China Sea, as if they even have a snowball’s chance in hell to win.

    On the first day of battle the Chinese will sink all their ships with hypersonic torpedoes. For which there is no countermeasure.

    And despite the much publicized recent Russian strategic withdrawal from Izyum, which was claimed as a victory in Ukraine and Western capitals nearly, 20,000 Ukrainian soldiers lost their lives many more injured. in a misbegotten offense. Connon fodder!

    At root, the West is caught in a classical Thucydedes trap. On the one hand, it wants to continue to rule the world. And on the other, it’s nadir has arrived. Either way is a lose-lose for the West.

    Indeed, they have already lost the economic and technological wars to China and Russia but like you David they do not want to lay down even to play dead 🤣

  31. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    “Putin has given a speech due for release today where it is expected that the SMO, Special Military Operation, will be upgraded to the self defense of the Russian Federation as the republics in the Donbass hold referenda by month’s end on their incorporation.”

    i have been listening to and watching this for days.


  32. i have been listening to and watching this for days…..of course you have, probably the featured article in the next edition of Krush quarterly.


  33. Very interesting discussion about a resolution to delay rate proceedings to recognize the fact public counsel was recently replaced due to illness.

    Very interesting. We wait with interest to see how long a simple decision to make will take the FTC commissioners.


  34. Watson: Still awaiting answers

    INTERVENORS OPPOSING the Barbados Light & Power Company Limited’s (BL& P) application for a rate increase are still awaiting some information from the company.
    This is what attorney Tricia Watson, who is intervening in partnership with chartered accountant David Simpson, told the Fair Trading Commission yesterday as the rate hearing convened at the Accra Beach Hotel in Christ Church.
    Watson complained that BL& P “has delayed by refusing to answer the intervenors’ initial interrogatories, citing a requirement for the [FTC] to direct them to answer”.
    “It must be obvious that . . . the company, if it was interested in speed and expedition, would immediately have commenced answering those interrogatories when they received them in March 2022, rather than sitting down on those interrogatories has for several months to only start answering in July,” she said.
    “And even having started answering those interrogatories, [BL& P] has failed to answer relevant interrogatories and has presented their answers and information in such a manner as to prevent intervenors from handling that information in a manner that would assist us in preparing our cases and analysing technical information with efficiency.”
    Watson asserted that the FTC “has in our view exacerbated that problem and contributed to the much touted regulatory lag by failing to direct the Barbados Light & Power…to answer the interrogatories, even though intervenors have pleaded for months for that to happen”.
    ‘No outstanding responses’
    ‘However, BL& P’s lead counsel Ramon Alleyne of Clarke Gittens Farmer told the hearing that “there are no interrogatory responses that are outstanding by the Barbados Light & Power in this matter”.
    “It has been repeated a number of times and I don’t wish the record to indicate that. I will not go back over arguments from my friend Miss Watson that have been previously tendered and have been answered but certainly as it relates to the record, there are no outstanding obligations on Barbados Light & Power’s part. We have answered interrogatories as ordered by this Commission,” he said.
    The rate hearing is scheduled to resume today at 9 a.m., at which time FTC panel chairman Dr Donley Carrington said they would hear a motion filed by Watson and Simpson for the FTC to order BL& P to amend its application based on the Fair Trade Commission depreciation decision dated March 25, 2022.
    He explained that depending on the outcome of this motion, the panel would also hear others filed by the company to amend the issues list, permit its expert witnesses to
    participate and give testimony virtually, for BL& P to give evidence via a witness panel, and a request by the company for confidentiality related to some pages of its application. (SC)

    Source: Nation


  35. Poor timing for seeking rate hike, says consumer body

    THE Barbados Consumer Empowerment Network (BCENe) has taken issue with how the country’s main power supplier, the Barbados Light & Power Company (BL& P), is going about seeking an increase in rates.
    The consumer advocate organisation is vehemently opposed to BL& P’s rate ask, in the midst of the current economic climate, and the lack of disposable income available to Barbadians due to the high cost of living.
    In a statement to the media yesterday, the BCNEe said it believes consumers deserve reliable, reasonably priced electricity.
    “We therefore take issue with how the matter concerning the application for rate increase by the Barbados Light and Power Company – the country’s main electricity supplier company – has been approached. Given that the FTC has agreed to an interim increase of 50 per cent, there must be an implied presumption that the FTC has enough evidence before it that would warrant an increase despite any objection from the intervenors. We find it unconscionable and unacceptable for the EMERA owned BL& P company to be asking for a rate increase in electricity cost, at a time where many Barbadians are facing
    hardship and all manner of dire economic and financial circumstances,” BCENe said.
    BCENe noted it supports the intervenors who are asking for due process and careful consideration on the hearing of the matter to determine whether BL& P should be granted the rate increase.
    According to the group, there seems to be a disconnect from the reality faced by consumers all over Barbados and the internal corporate affairs of the BL& P and its parent company EMERA.
    Business community
    “We are aware of the promise of a marginal increase in rates in the short term to business entities but we are surprised that the business community in Barbados has said little to nothing on the potential negative repercussions of the rate increase on their businesses and profit margins. We are therefore calling on the business community to speak up and speak out on this serious issue. We are also calling on the general public of Barbados to voice their concerns on the interim rate increase,” the statement added.
    BCNEe said it had similar
    concerns to those raised by intervenors who have already expressed their concerns to the FTC and the BL& P about what they would call “a monopolistic captivity” of consumers. “We believe that consumers will be compelled to pay higher electricity rates at a cost they could barely afford while the risks to BL& P will remain relatively low.”
    The statement said that over the years, Barbadians have struggled with unreasonably high utility rates and chronic underinvestment in utility infrastructure provided by the BL& P.
    “Lower electricity rates for consumers are what we really want in Barbados, but outside of this we believe that a rate increase at this time is not good for the economy of Barbados nor for consumers. BCENe believes that with unity, determination, and solidarity, as Barbadians, we can rally our support to show our disapproval of a rate increase for the BL& P and agitate to see more affordable and sustainable electricity rates in Barbados,” the statement concluded.
    (BA/PR)

    Source: Nation


  36. A people’s solution

    THE GROUNDSWELL OF INCESSANT cries from some people for relief from the rising cost of living is reverberating across Barbados.
    They are complaining about the cost of petrol, food prices and user fees at the banks. The interim rate increase granted to Barbados Light & Power will not help.
    Society has changed significantly over the past three decades with matters related to consumer and mortgage credit, deposit insurance, small business and compulsory land acquisitions becoming critical consumer matters.
    The public should not expect the Fair Trading Commission, the Office of Public Counsel or the Department of Commerce to resolve the bread and butter issues they are crying out against. These are state agencies and many of the citizens’ complaints are against government institutions.
    In many instances, laws on the books are always subjected to interpretation and can be contested in the courts. The reality is that individually many consumers do not have the means to defend their case.
    This is why the recently established Barbados Consumer Empowerment Network should
    be welcomed and supported.
    Regrettably, two months after its launch this advocacy group remains too low-keyed at a time when the voice of the consumer should be echoing across the land.
    Barbados does not have a record of successful consumer associations given the ineffectiveness of previous efforts even though we must laud the efforts of Malcolm Gibbs-Taitt and the late Curtis Hinds. There is an entrenched indifference to consumerism by a large section of our society who embrace the notion of survival of the fittest.
    The challenges brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic, the rising levels of unemployment, and the spiralling costs caused by direct and indirect taxation plus inflation, are all forcing changes to our bad old individualistic attitudes.
    The situation should be clearly understood by the chairman of the new consumer lobby group, Lynette Eastmond, a former Minister of Government, leader of a former political party and an attorney. She should have a good grasp of the issues and connection with the public on the issues.
    This fledging consumer group must urgently step up its roles in educating, advising and counselling the public while lobbying
    parliamentarians to enforce consumer rights. The organisation needs funding to undertake its role effectively and the public should contribute to help maintain its independence.
    Even with a tech-savvy virtual office environment, there will be expenditure given the need for talented administrative support and to conduct credible research and consumer surveys. There must be no loopholes in the data presented to policymakers, the business community, the media and consumers.
    Even at this early stage, the new lobby group should consider a Consumer Protect Week to bring attention to itself and the key issues for which the public wants meaningful resolutions.
    Having a strong and united voice to champion a worthy cause may be the solution to consumers’ concerns. There is a need for a people’s solution.
    The recently established Barbados Consumer
    Empowerment Network should be welcomed and supported. This fledging consumer group must urgently step up its roles in educating, advising and counselling the public . . . .


    Source: Nation


  37. Off to court after refusal
    by SHAWN CUMBERBATCH shawncumberbatch@nationnews.com
    THE FAIR TRADING COMMISSION’S (FTC) adjudication of the Barbados Light & Power Company Limited’s (BL& P) application for an electricity rate increase is headed to court after just one day of the hearings.
    A contentious session ended at the Accra Beach Hotel yesterday with Acting Public Counsel Sharon Deane vowing to petition “a higher court” for relief after the FTC panel chaired by Dr Donley Carrington dismissed two motions seeking a two-month adjournment of the proceedings.
    The Acting Public Counsel, supported by several intervenors at the rate hearing, is expected to file an injunction with the High Court today in an effort to get the suspension the FTC denied. Intervenors met at the Barbados Association of Retired Persons (BARP) headquarters yesterday evening to discuss the matter.
    Carrington, who led a panel that included commissioners John Griffith, Ruan Martinez, Dr Ankie Scott-Joseph and Samuel Wallerson, said the motions brought by the Office of Public Counsel and the BARP intervenors were “late in all circumstances”.
    “The Commission is of the view that it would be just to exercise its discretion to refuse the motion of the Office of Public Counsel and the Barbados Association of Retired Persons for the adjournment of this hearing, and the motions are so dismissed,” Carrington said in reading the FTC’s decision.
    Deane responded: “I just listened to what you said, but we would like to have the proceedings stayed as we intend to proceed to a higher court.”
    Carrington continued: “Noted. There was no application for the stay of the proceedings, so we would therefore be proceeding tomorrow morning at 9 a.m.”
    However, Deane said: “I just made an oral application for the stay of the proceedings. I couldn’t have made an application before until you made your decision not to grant the adjournment. So I’ve made an oral application to have the proceedings stayed because we intend to proceed to a higher court.
    “And this is customary
    and normal in court proceedings in superior courts. The act also allows for oral applications,” she added.
    Carrington said that until an order of the court was received by the FTC the Public Counsel’s application for a stay “is refused”.
    The FTC’s ruling on the motions for suspension came after several hours of deliberation in the afternoon, and followed Deane’s submission that the FTC “has known from as early as July 27 2022 . . . that then Public Counsel, Miss Alison Burke, was incapacitated by serious illness and was . . . on sick leave until August 15, 2022”.
    “This ensured that she was incapable of meeting any procedural deadlines, or communicating with her clients and performing her statutory mandatory duties,” Deane said.
    “Furthermore, there was additional notice at the procedural hearing of Monday, August 22, 2022. The transcript shows that Miss Burke was still on sick leave, and there was no set return date at that point. It was against that backdrop that the FTC still ignored all this information, almost forgetting their statutory duty to protect consumers and still set the hearing down for September the 21,” she argued.
    The Acting Public Counsel said that having taken up her post on Monday “you’re basically looking at a situation where you have the Office of the Public Counsel with literally a day to consume all the relevant information”.
    “My concern is that a failure to provide us with this adjournment creates a situation where it is almost an abuse of a discretion. To me, if there is a failure to grant the adjournment . . . before, such an adjournment, I do believe, will be granted in superior courts to this tribunal,” she asserted.
    But Carrington said that given the gravity of the matter, “the motions for an adjournment should have been made within reasonable time” of the FTC order which fixed the date for the rate hearing.
    “. . . The Commission considers that an adjournment at this stage would cause considerable disruption and inconvenience given the number of witnesses, the number of persons participating in the hearing as intervenors, and the length of the hearing,” he said.
    “An adjournment at this stage would result in
    substantial wasted time and costs, which eventually would be borne by the consumers.”
    Deane was supported in her call for a suspension by a number of intervenors, including attorney Tricia Watson, finance manager Ricky Went, Government’s Energy Division, represented by chief legal officer Samantha Cummins, and Lieutenant Colonel Trevor Tyrone Browne of the Cooperative Coalition/ Barbados Sustainable Energy Cooperative Society Ltd.
    They argued that the suspension should be permitted in the interest of fairness, and considering that having just been granted an interim rate increase, BL& P would face no financial disadvantage from a two-month delay.
    However, speaking on the utility company’s behalf, lead counsel Ramon Gittens, of Clarke Gittens Farmer, saw no need for a suspension of the hearing.
    “There . . . is significant data before the Commission to suggest that it is ready [and] able, and that no party or member of the public of Barbados will be disadvantaged by a hearing if it was to continue . . . and we strenuously object to the requested adjournment,” he said.

    Source: Nation


  38. The FTC Hearing so far has become mired in procedural matters.


  39. ” Government will end the mask-wearing mandate and travel protocols related to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) at midnight on Thursday in Barbados.

    Acting Prime Minister Santia Bradshaw said mask wearing in general was now going to be optional, but she said it remained firmly intact for select places across the island.


  40. Canada will drop its Covid-19 vaccine requirement for visitors by September 30, government officials have told the Globe and Mail and other Canadian news outlets. On the same day, the country is reportedly also going to end random Covid arrival tests and make the ArriveCan app optional. But the requirement to wear masks on domestic flights and train trips will remain, according the sources.


  41. @Hants
    Wondering if BT was being mischievous.
    BLP vs BL&P


  42. @ TheOGazerts,

    It is probably just a typo by a sleep deprived employee.

    He was probably maving sure that he/she got the BTMI BMF story on page 42 correct.

    More bALONEY racing.


  43. @TheOGazerts,

    Hope you read page 3. re BL&P returning $100 million to Emera in 2015.

    The front page was very “dramatic”


  44. Fiona is devastating in Nova Scotia. Emera will be busy.

    https://www.cp24.com/video?clipId=2528412


  45. Nova Scotia Power Inc. is a vertically integrated electric utility in Nova Scotia, Canada. It is privately owned by Emera


  46. Why do people gripe.

    Barbados is the most developed island in the Region and far surpasses the UK, Canada and Britain.

    We are the envy of the world.

    No one can touch us.


  47. Seems to have been much talk, and correctly so, about the repatriation of profits, a.k.a dividends.
    People seem less aware these are not $BDD. So an entity which doesn’t earn Fx, but spends plenty of it, for its primary input (oil), then gets to convert its profits ($BDD) to Fx, and export them.
    This is the perennial dilemma of having a currency, which has no value beyond the island’s shores.

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