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Published On: Tue, Nov 22nd, 2016

SHTA sounds the alarm about everything

GREAT BAY – The St. Maarten Hospitality & Trade Association (SHTA) took note of the recent arrest in the Immigration Department and applauds this step toward improved accountability. “As a young nation, we must find the way to uphold ethics and accountability in ourselves and our fellow citizens. Unfortunately, there are far too few shining examples of proper accountability. This month in particular we are overwhelmed with just the opposite,” the association says in a press statement.

As a first example, the SHTA mentions “the soft opening of a parking lot that rumors to have cost an extraordinary amount of tax dollars; which seemingly has been built solely for the betterment of a lolo that operates illegally.”

The large reserved handicap spaces are appreciated at first glance until you look around and see that once parked, a handicapped person has no way to get comfortably off the lot, the SHTA points out. “The attempt at a desperately needed sidewalk breaks to preserve a water meter and a road sign. Visible just beyond the parking lot, are the overflowing government garbage bins on the beach which now are more difficult to access so in essence they don’t get emptied or not very often.

The dump burns without even a discussion to resolve the garbage crisis—no one to hold the management company accountable nor the Ministers that awarded a contract to an unqualified entity nor the politicians that jumped before a proper waste management solution could materialize, the SHTA points out another sore issue. “These fires affect the health and future of every single resident; and yet we don’t do anything tangible about it. Petitions and peaceful demonstrations barely get any notice or traction.”

The next example the SHTA makes is “the revelation that our tourism minister misled the people again by stating that a North American rep had been hired when they themselves are not aware of it—and hence nothing continues to be done to market St. Maarten anywhere in the world aside from band aid measures put together by SHTA.”

Simultaneously, next to the fires, our lone power generation company suffers not one but two major failures, the press release continues. “The replacement generator was not ordered in time, the cost of utility is exorbitant for the quality of the service, stock piling funds with no plan of equipment replacement and bringing the country to its knees for days on end. Funny enough this happened just after celebrating our namesake holiday—a day of pride in our homeland.”

These prolonged outages, the SHTA says, occur for many of us off at the office during working hours and then at home. “This has reduced total productivity by at least 50 percent. No one does the math to extrapolate that to GDP, tax revenue, lost tourism revenue all brought on by blatant mismanagement of resources both human and financial. The people are told that they don’t need to be notified; they must trust that Gebe is doing everything possible to alleviate the situation. That’s a lark, as it seems Gebe is doing everything possible except to prepare properly for avoiding it in the first place.”

It makes one wonder how the meter readers, who are out in force today, will be abused, the SHTA mutters. “Again, there is no one to call them to task, no one to demand that this doesn’t happen again; no one to replace all the damaged equipment, all the lost food, and the lost business and reputation. Even the demand to the minister for a renewable energy plan within 90 days has long since passed. Out of sight out of mind.”

The SHTA offers some sort of a solution: “Perhaps we could hold SZV accountable for the lost productivity caused by Gebe by requesting our employees to be stamped out for three days by their family doctors in order to recoup salary costs; but is that ethical? Do we hold ourselves to higher standard than those performing vital and expensive services around us?”

Do we even know if the ransom was paid, if our countries data was lost? The SHTA wonders about the computer troubles the government recently experienced with so-called ransom ware. “How many false tax assessments were reopened because they had to restore from back up days and perhaps months prior? How could our government’s infrastructure fall victim to such a crippling attack? Who is responsible for safe guarding our information? Who pays for the lost productivity of government? Was the timing a coincidence? Do we have assurances that it won’t happen again?”

The SHTA also rails against the country’s financial status. “No budget for 2017 and no approved national accounts since 2011; only devastating reports from the Audit Chamber and Cft and a substantial tax increase in the form of National Health Insurance looming on the horizon. No publicly available financials for government owned companies, even though it is a requirement by law to file them at the Chamber of Commerce. Speaking of the Chamber why aren’t they enforcing this regulation?”

Regardless of what political spectrum you are on, the news of yet another coalition was disheartening,” the SHTA says in a comment on the political situation. “A coalition of three parties, none of whom can hold it together on their own, is only as strong as its weakest link. We can hope that they will place country above self and find the most qualified individuals to govern and then hope that those persons have no complaints right, wrong or indifferent filed with the prosecutor. All parties ran stating that they agreed the instability is hurting our Country, yet two months after the election they apparently need to be reminded of that concern; and next a new coalition?”

“How to turn this around before it is too late?

What is the long-term solution to this complacency, lack of accountability and overwhelming incompetence?” the SHTA wonders. “The herd mentality is “that it has happened so we have to live with it”. Our population is made up of people from many different cultures, many of whom state out right that if this happened where they come from there would be strikes and protests on the street. Just across our border, we’ve seen it happen time and again; but not in Dutch St. Maarten. We certainly do not advocate civil disobedience but we wonder just what will turn this around before it is too late.”