Saturday, March 14, 2009

The Antigua and Barbuda election results.



The UPP won the election in an extremely tight battle where they ended up with 10 seats including the BPM seat in Barbuda against the ALP's 7. For more specifics on the vote you can goto this site where the above image came from. Two seats are being contested by the ALP and with countless last minute issues and problems associated with the voting process I am sure that there will be plenty of drama in the near future. Lester Bird reported in a Daily Observer article that they are contesting two seats because of issues which he said disrupted the legal voting process. Some voting started 5 hours late! It was said that there was fighting in Barbuda yesterday where that seat was one by one vote with 11 spoiled votes. What it means generally for our country i don't know for sure, but with the UPP in power running the country as usual it is my strong opinion that the environment suffers and the cost of living stays higher. The good news is that several of the ALP guys who the nation thinks are crooks will not be in control, and this I think is what won the election for the UPP. Personally, I think this was a lose lose election for our people and many of us closed our eyes and put our "x" down wherever it fell.

Friday, March 13, 2009

UPP victorious before final count.

After a what both parties are calling a disastrous start to the voting with some voting offices opening 5 hours late because of a "printing problem"!!!!!
Anyway, at 8:40 am they are still counting votes in one last constituency. For results please look at this site:
http://www.antiguaelections.com/Default.htm

Thursday, March 12, 2009

letter of the week.

Each week I will try to remember to post an email or message board post from one of our happy customers. This one came from a guest who was out recently during some very rough conditions.


Good Morning Nell,I would like to thank everyone at Adventure Antigua for an outstanding timeon the Xtreme Circumnav. We had a wonderful time. All four of us sat inthe back of the boat getting soaked as JD skillfully navigated the waves.It was like an amusement park ride! We loved stopping at Stingray City - itwas amazing how docile those fascinating animals were. The crew, JD,Trevor, and Chris, were extremely accommodating to my wife and I. See, mywife develops a rash if she allows salt water to dry on her skin and then beexposed to the sun. The guys offered her the freshwater hose at every stopand they also gave her the option to ride by JD where she won't get hit bythe spray. The lunch on Green Island was superb and we had a great timewalking down the beaches. I do have to say that the stop at RendezvousBeach was my favorite. The sand was pristine and the rum-punch wasoutstanding. All-in-all we had a superb time on the excursion and wouldrecommend it to anyone who asks. I hope that someday you can offer it inthe hotel that we stayed at(Grand Pineapple) because we do plan onreturning. Thank you again and have a wonderful day! Jim Elder

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

The week of elections in Antigua. What to do? PART "2"

Back on March 24th 2004 when we set off on the Eco Tour we were very excited at the prospect of a new era in leadership. The UPP had won the election by far and would be making some needed changes. What was wrong would be made right. In five Islands Harbour we passed one of the Wadadli Cats being skippered by Sheldon and we both waved blue UPP t-shirts at each other. Most of the nation was happy with the decision they had made, and later at Bird Island that day I turned on Observer Radio to listen to people calling in offering congratulations. I decided to call and said something like “Congratulations to the UPP. I am happy to know that people like Harold Lovell will be leading this nation as I am sure with people like him involved tourism will be better off. Winston said “thanks Bird Island” which is where I said I was calling from.
I didn’t know Lovell was going to be minister of Tourism but was exceptionally happy to hear that he was appointed later. In fact, I was so happy that I organized all the people I knew who were involved in tours and charters to get together in an association so that we could meet with him. I was sure that we could finally get some proper representation at government level with a man like Lovell in charge of tourism. Some forty five company representatives met at a hotel conference room in St. Johns to start the Antigua and Barbuda Excursion Alliance. We elected a board or representatives including a president who as it turned out was me, and then we discussed issues that related to all of our businesses. After this, the board met several times for hours and hours to prepare a document that we could take to the minister who we had sent a prelim letter to. We had our organization registered as a not for profit company and waited for a reply from the Ministry. Nada. We knew they were busy, so we waited. Nada. We then got one of our board members who had a friend in the ministry to contact the Minister directly about our proposed meeting. We were told the Minister to get a meeting with the Junior Minister of Tourism, Hilson Baptiste (Brother B). This wasn’t what we wanted and again asked the minister to meet with us. Once again we were told that all tour companies and water sports had to speak with the Junior Minister of Tourism. Determined to push forward we ended up meeting with Brother B at the Ministry of Tourism. He listened for to us speak but generally have us more advice and spoke more than he listened. He’s a great talker and an excellent politician. He told us to make some changes to our letter and our presentation and to come back to him again soon. The board did some research on similar organizations in other islands and met with the minister again the following month. This is the letter we presented to him sometime in 2004:

Mr. Harold E. Lovell
Mr. Hilson Baptise
The Ministry of Tourism
Antigua and Barbuda


Dear Sirs:

After our meeting with you several weeks ago we have had some time to take your advice and have properly formed the structure of the Antigua Barbuda Excursion Alliance. We have also been more specific with regard to our members’ goals and the following is a description of the issues and the ways we see that they can be solved:

1. Fair representation of our tours to the tourists in this country.
A) We feel that all tour desks should be run either by the hotels themselves or by our alliance. This could be accomplished if the ministry sets up a meeting with the Hotel Association pointing out the inherent problems with individual excursion operators running tour desks. The main hotels in question, Jolly Beach and The St. James Club should also be urged by the ministry to change this unfair policy. Many of our members complain that since the tour desks were taken over by a competitor they have not been sold at these hotels.

B) All ABEA members must be allowed to have brochures on display at any tour desk in Antigua, and no member should be excluded from being sold by any tour operator, which is currently taking place. There are several Tour Operators like Bo Tours and Virgin Holidays (Sun Tours), which will not sell many of our member’s tours because of exclusive deals with other operators. This policy is running small members out of business and is preventing others from getting into this market.

2. Protection for indigenous operators.

A) All watersports and Excursions should be owned and operated by Antiguan or Barbudan citizens who are majority shareholders in that particular business. With all the talk of a free market economy we feel that protection of our sector made up mostly of small businesses is still important. Since 2002 many tourists have come here only to set up shop with minimal investment running similar local excursion operators out of business. Examples are Ultra Marine a dive company, Adventure Caribbean Yacht Charters, Jolly Charters, and Island Speedboats. Why are they permitted to do this? Within one week of arriving for the first time in Antigua someone can start an excursion company with their private yacht or speedboat. Usually they will be offered duty free fuel and parts as a foreign registered boat too. They must get permits through the Ministry of Tourism if they are foreign flagged boats. If they are not they there still needs to be some sort of control preventing them from setting up excursions as soon as they arrive in the country. This is totally wrong and is also running locals out of business.

B) Hotels should not be allowed to start any more excursions within their companies. There was a cabinet decision some years ago pertaining to hotels buying catamarans therefore cutting out excursion operators. This was supposedly stopped and yet we have more and more excursions being swallowed by hotels. Snorkeling excursions have to be offered outside of the hotel to keep our small businesses alive. Many small snorkeling operators and dive operators have closed recently in a directly proportional frequency to the number of similar excursions being offered by hotels in-house. For example, St. James now has a Deep Sea fishing boat and the reps are not allowed to sell any other fishing trip at all even if the guests ask for it. This is crazy!

3. Duty Free concessions and Tax structure.

A) Fuel is of major concern to most excursion operators and is a cost that has been lessened for most operators in our neighboring islands. We feel that duty free fuel for excursion operators is an essential concession that should be considered. IT would free up more money for our business to spend on marketing and training and generally improving our product. Many of the other islands in the region offer this concession to their marine operators.

B) Duty Free concessions on regular spare parts, which have to be imported. Small and large operators can be overwhelmed with the high costs of the parts alone without the burden of duty and freight. For example the average propeller in our sector landed in Antigua is US $1500. Propellers in Antigua do not last long and it is not uncommon for small operators out collecting off the shore to damage props. We are asking for the same concessions that the Marine Trades Association is asking for their sector.

C) Corporate Tax is something that needs special consideration for Excursion operators. Because of obvious liability issues, excursion operators have to operate as limited liability companies, and as a result fall into the corporate tax structure. Dealing with audited accounts and complex tax structure can be a major challenge for the small excursion operator and we urge the Government to think about the small business when coming up with the new tax system outlined in the pre-election manifesto.

4. Environmental protection of our key sites.

A) Nearly all of our members rely on a healthy Antiguan and Barbudan Natural Environment both ecologically and historically. Therefore protection and enhancement of our historical and ecological assets is essential to the survival of our sector and will help the sustainable development of the country on the whole. Protection and Enhancement will also set us apart from many of the other islands where there is very little natural or historical assets to show guests.

B) Key Marine habitats (which are made up of mangroves, flats, reefs, and offshore islands) that need immediate protection are as follows: Great Bird Island, Rabbit Island, Green Island, Guiana Island, and Exchange Island. These places are used daily by our members as essential components of their day-to-day business. They are extremely important assets, which can be there for the long term with very little capital expenditure. Most valuable assets in Antigua need large sums of money to maintain unlike these key areas. Examples of things that are threatening these environmental assets are:

i. Destruction of mangroves due to development. This has happened this year at Long Island, Maiden Island and Emerald Cove and cannot be allowed to take place in the future. These are assets which cannot easily be replaced and have such a massive benefit which man made attractions can not achieve.

ii. Destruction of flats due to dredging. Flats are a complex ecosystem not very well understood by the people of Antigua, but they are much more healthy habitats at this stage that the coral reefs (a similar system) are. For example, cockles, clams, oysters, bonefish, permit, barracuda, snapper, jacks, rays, “chicken lobster”, shrimp, crabs, live inside flats. You then have countless species of animals feeding on the as well. A good example of flats can be seen in Cades Bay along the mangrove habitat. It is also what was dredged at Maiden Island recently. Guiana Island has miles of world-class flats, which are used by our members daily to show off our healthy ecosystems.

iii. Destruction of coral reefs due to a variety of stressors, which include over fishing on the reefs, reckless anchoring, mangrove depletion, deforestation of our hillsides, and silting due to dredging or other construction practices. All of these stressors are controllable and some very easily. For example, the ABEA feels that in the key areas listed above, there should be no fishing at all allowed. This was outlined in the UPP pre-election manifesto. There are countless studies where such bans on fishing in key areas have enhanced fisheries on the whole. We are told daily that our reefs are not as good as other holiday destinations that our guests have been to. In many of the other islands where snorkeling is better than ours marine patrol boats regularly stop fishermen. Patrol boats can easily be paid for in a variety of ways without the Gov. having to spend any more money at all. For example, in the Bahamas every boat entering the waters is offered a fishing license for a fee. They are given rules as to where they can fish and to what they are permitted to catch. Also, at very popular destinations mooring balls are set up so that boats don’t have to anchor. When a yacht picks up one of these balls a fee is paid on a per day basis. These fees could be used to purchase and maintain two patrol boats to keep our reefs alive and well. I am sure that our members would be willing to contribute to this as well in some way. Our reefs, mangroves and flats are here for our children and children’s children and need to be looked after.

5. Transportation

A) We would like the government to understand that in order to provide good service for the guests from all hotels around Antigua we must be able to get the guests to our tours at a reasonable rate. Many potential guests stay in their hotels rather than pay the transportation costs to and from our excursions. Therefore we propose special rates be offered by taxi operators to tour operators so that we may include transfer in our excursion costs.

B) We also want to be able to collect guests from hotels and ships using our own transportation without fear of conflict. If a tour is US $50 per person and we have to pay cab fare of US $60 round trip for one person then it’s just not worth it.

C) We should be able to decide which taxis we can use if we are paying for the service. This way we are assured that good service is offered to our clients. The current system leaves transportation of our guests up to a line system even though we pay for the cab. This means that even if we get bad service we have to put up with it.

6. Member privilege and Member Rules.

A) One of the good things about being in an Alliance is that our members are bound by rules, which govern their general practices. A well-polished self-governing body keeps standards high and makes sure that minimum requirements are adhered to.

B) With a strong set of membership rules and regulations and a good board who can enforce them there has to be an incentive as well to adhere to them, and we feel that the privileges/concessions that are being requested from the government should only be afforded to members in good standing. For example, if we know an operator doesn’t have the correct safety gear then we will give them a warning to correct the problem. If this is not addressed then we can suspend them from the Alliance and let the authorities know. Their duty free fuel allowance could be suspended. This will make sure that members don’t break the rules.
We hope that you can see the potential of this Alliance of small local businesses, and will take into consideration how hard it is to stay “afloat” in these incredibly competitive times. With the CSME and the free market that already exists in Antigua local operators are falling by the wayside and we feel that this important sector shouldn’t go down the same road that the local restaurants did after the all-inclusives arrived on Antigua. Locally run small businesses need help and this Alliance can be seen as something to look up to if given the opportunity. We look forward to speaking with you again.

Sincerely,
Eli Fuller, Nick Cheremeteff, Eustace Armstrong, Conrad Labarrie, Laurance Gonsalves

Antigua Barbuda Excursions Alliance



This next meeting was more of the same. I think we ended up having about five meetings at the Ministry of Tourism including meetings where the director of tourism purposely didn’t invite the Junior Minister. We met with the Ministry’s Environment officer we met with the Transport Board and time and time again we got nowhere. We tried to meet with the Minister of Tourism to explain our frustration without any success. After months and months of meetings and countless hours of hard work, telephone calls, emails, letters and more meetings I couldn’t take it anymore. I was totally convinced that my hard work was getting nowhere and that we were just being run around. Not one point on our agenda had been taken to a higher level by anyone in the Ministry and I resigned as president. The ABEA met several more times and in the end decided that until there were some big changes to the new UPP run Ministry of Tourism our strategy wasn’t going to work. Once again each of our businesses plodded along with all the problems we had before the election and found it harder and harder to operate. Taxes went up, we were refused the right to register for ABST without any consultation with our representative group. Tour boat licenses were pushed forward without any discussion with us. More and more foreign operators came into the sector. Generally the entire excursion sector suffered and no help at all was given to our organization or to the individual companies they represented.
I decided to go to the Minister of Labour. Again, getting a meeting with a minister in Antigua was extremely difficult and after months of trying I managed to get one. Jackie Quinn-Leandro sat patiently listening to my presentation. It mostly had to do with point number “2” in the letter above. The tours and excursions operators of Antigua have always been told by the former and the current government that their sector is reserved for Antiguan and Barbudans only. We have been told that no foreigners can do this type of business yet every year more and more small foreign run tour and excursion companies start up. The minister said that these people could not possibly have work permits or permission to do any such work on a radio show several weeks earlier, so I wanted to speak with her about this. After our meeting she said she would speak with the Labour Commissioner, the Coast Guard, the Minister of Tourism and the Chief Immigrations officer to come up with a proper policy that would protect local operators in this field. Several months later when she was on another call in radio show I called in to ask her about her progress. She had been talking about illegal workers with Winston Derrick. My call caught her by surprise and she made some excuses and said that she would be in touch. Nada. I called her office several times leaving messages, but nothing was done. I gave up.
Since nothing was done by any of the ministers in the Tourism department and nothing was done in the Labour department, I decided to speak with the Tax man. Lord knows Money talks and Bull s%$& walks so I knew that the Minister of Finance would listen to our concerns. Several excursion operators were very concerned by the number of new foreign boat operators running boats that were not Antiguan registered as required by law when doing day tours and excursions. Some hotels were now doing tours on their own boats too. All this time local excursion operators had to buy boats, import them to Antigua, pay duty, pay ABST and register the boats locally. Foreign boats doing tours were free from all that tax and could get parts and service tax free. Foreign boats and tours were at a competitive advantage. Errol Cort was very interested in the loop holes outlined and said something would be done to create a level playing field. I told him that local boats would love to be operating in a tax free environment if we could get it. This time I did see some action and was contacted by someone in the Ministry of Finance to get more details. That was months ago and nothing has been done since then. We are still paying 15% ABST and even higher duty on all of our imported parts while our foreign registered competitors are Tax free. I agree tax has to be paid, but why are some who don’t have proper work permits or proper permits allowed to operate at a competitive advantage?
Anyway, back in December I read in the Antigua Sun paper that there was a tourism conference being held where leaders from all the tourism related sectors were invited to attend. I called some of the other operators in our excursion sector to see if any knew about it. None did, but I decided to go anyway. Minister Lovell addressed the gathering in a “State of the industry” speech where he spoke about all the amazing projects that were coming on stream as well as the great projects that had taken place recently. He then spoke about the alleged lack of local entrepreneurs speaking about the 45 “attractions” in St. Martin and asking why we only had half of that number here. He mentioned the Zip Line tour company here saying that we needed more of these types of companies and encouraged locals to be more visionary and to invest money into the sector that he alleged was severely lacking substance. After he spoke I told him I had a problem with his allegation and that I also had a problem with him calling on Antiguan’s to blindly jump into this market. The TV cameras and radio station mikes were live and I almost felt bad saying the things I had to say, but his speech was a slap in the face of all Antigua and Barbuda excursion companies who have been struggling to stay afloat for the past five years while asking his ministry and his government for much needed help. I told him that I had no doubt at all that Antiguan businessmen would be at a competitive disadvantage if they entered this market. I told him I had been trying to meet with him about this for some time. He said this was untrue and that his door was always open to me. Bla bla bla. If he accused me of telling tales then I could handle it because as long as I could get something done for the people in our sector it mattered very little. The next morning I called the ministry to set up this meeting once again. There were 13 or 14 telephone numbers in the book for the Ministry of Tourism and I called every single one that day without getting a reply to one of those numbers. I spent one hour calling and decided to do some other work. The next day I tried again and after twenty five minutes before I finally was able to speak with the Minister’s secretary. She told me that I was wrong to attack the minister in the way I did two days before, but told me she would organize a meeting. The first meeting finally came and I was called to say the minister had the flu. The second meeting came and I was told by email that the Minister had to go off island last minute. I emailed back and said I was willing to meet at any time that the minister would be available. Time and time again I tried to set this meeting up and in the end stopped getting replies from the several people within the Ministry of Tourism cc’s on the email.
Six weeks after the Minister told me that his door was open to me on before a live audience I attended a birthday party where I ran into local radio host Winston Derrick. I told him about my trouble meeting with the minister. He got very frustrated and said he would organize the meeting for me. Sure enough within a few days I was given a date to meet once again with the Minister.
The meeting was very productive with Minister Lovell, the Director of Tourism, Mr. Marshal and another technician attending. We went over two parts of the letter above and the minister gave direction to his director and technician to do certain research and to get back together in two weeks. One of the things that he asked the director to do was to find out how other islands like Barbados and St. Lucia dealt with the excursion sector. He left us to off to Cabinet where he was late. Two weeks later I emailed the director to see how things were going and to remind him that he said he was going to be sending me a letter inviting the Antigua and Barbuda Excursion Alliance to get their board together to come and meet with him at the Ministry. No reply. Another week passed and I emailed them all again. No reply. At the cocktail party recently for the opening of the RORC 600 I saw all three men at the same time and Lovell asked me how things were going. I told him that nothing had been done (the truth) and urged him to try to help move this matter along. Not a thing was done.
There is more I suppose and I could go on and on about the Ministry of Environment and how disastrous they have been on getting things done or even worse on stopping bad things from happening. The mining of all the sand out of Mckinnons Swamp and again at FFries Bay was unforgivable mainly because you had educated officers in the Environment Ministry writing letters asking the DCA and Minister of Tourism to issue stop orders only to have those letters ignored. Sand was taken and some people got rich. Terrible things have happened environmentally all over Antigua with the highly educated “technicians” in the Ministry of Environment pleading with the Minister and the Development and Control Authority to stop the destruction only to be ignored. What is the point of the Ministry of Environment if they have no power at all. Their educated opinions are cast aside like the mangroves that have been dug up or the sand mining regulations that would have stopped trucks from taking away white sand from our land.
I don’t know if I would openly call the UPP corrupt, but I am telling you some stories in this blog about things that actually happened. There are many rumors and stories about corruption in certain parts of the UPP government to do with sand and trucking and lots of other things, but I don’t know about them to say they are true or not. You know i blogged about some of the perceived corruption within the sand mining sector as well as how badly i thought John Maginley looked after the residentas and businesses in the Coolidge area and can read more (if you have time) here on that in this link. As I said earlier there are also loads of stories about the ALP who were in power five years ago, and I just can’t understand why none of these guys get into trouble. These stories here that I mention are true because I was part of them.
It’s been five years of trying to get something on the letter reprinted above ticked off and accomplished and nothing has been done. It is extremely depressing when you work hard to encourage people to do their jobs and nothing at all is accomplished.
We vote in a general election in just a few days and like many on this twin island state I am lost as what to do. Many of us voted for the UPP so that we could vote the old ALP out of power. It won’t be the same this time as the UPP are now in power. Some of those same ALP people are still running to be re-elected, but is the threat of having a few of the old ALP at the helm enough to make us vote again for the UPP? The cost of living has gone up in this country so much in the past five years with more tax than most people can handle. Many Antiguans have left to look for work outside of the country where life is easier. I have a pilot friend tell me that after doing his accounts he discovered that after the first four years that the UPP got into power he had paid an additional EC $62,000 in tax and the cost of living for him had also gone up considerably. The road from his house to his job was no better and neither was his healthcare. The things we had hoped to see have not materialized magically and many of us wonder how long it will take for the huge tax increases we are incurring will be turned into something tangible. After 28 years of non stop leadership the old Bird run ALP party finally were kicked out of power five years ago because it was felt that they were just too corrupt. The stories had to have some truth. After only five years in power the UPP today have plenty stories of corruption being thrown at them too and with the stories of mismanagement and neglect I am totally lost. Is the new APL really new? If not will their leadership give us a better standard of living? Will there be positive changes to the UPP or will it be another five years of the same? I know I don’t like how the Antiguan excursion operators have been treated by the UPP and I don’t think there will be positive changes in the near future, but the thought of one or two of the former ALP clan running this island is scary.

Monday, March 09, 2009

The week of elections in Antigua. What to do?

We all have sad stories of incompetence, corruption and other abuse of power that took place during the unbroken 28 year run of the ALP government up until five years ago when the UPP were swept into power. It seems so long ago that they were in power, and some of us wonder if much has changed within their leadership and party. I met with Max Fernandez recently and know for sure that he can’t be compared with Bernard Percival whose former constituency he took over as the ALP representative there. Just that one guy means the ALP is not the same party that it was five years ago, but he’s one guy. I haven’t met with any of the other new guys, but know that one is being sued for child support and one worked hand in hand with the Japanese and their support for whaling. I would have a very hard time voting for either of them. Another of the ALP lineup waved a gun in my face after the security guards at the club I was running told him that I didn’t allow weapons of any sort on the property. He was so upset that we wouldn’t let him come into the club with his licensed pistol that after screaming abuse at me for 25 minutes in my office he finally stormed out of the club. I don’t think I can forget the gun being waved in my face by a mad man screaming and frothing any time soon. Probably the reason I can’t forget that is that later that night in the wee hours of the morning it was alleged that he sexually molested a youth that he picked up at another club. The charges were later dropped by the under aged boys mother. He’s running for his second term as leader for his constituency and is probably seen as the Achilles heel of the party. As I said, we all have disgusting stories about events and people from the time before the last election. When a party is allowed to be in power for 28 years people almost accept and expect bad things happening. I suppose most of the bad stories were to do with corruption, and I personally think that the leading UPP party won the election based on the now famous promise to make “what was wrong..right” and to stamp out corruption. There are still calls everyday to “lock up” the former corrupt politicians from the last administration. Many of us have asked why none of them were charged and there have been some interesting excuses. Some say that the Attorney General for the leading UPP administration, Justin Simon, is a “Bird Man” meaning he is secretly a supporter of Lester Bird and his ALP party. Kinda crazy in my opinion but what do I know? Others say that if the ruling UPP party starts locking up the former ALP leaders they will be unable to stop some of their own from being tarred by the same brush. One often hears Errol Cort’s name being thrown about in those types of discussions. It is felt by many that Lester Bird’s ALP made Errol Cort their Attorney General because of the extremely close relationship they had with him. There have always been allegations of corruption thrown at Mr. Cort which were alleged to have happened while he was a Bird associate. He held several key government positions while working for the Bird Government while at the same time running his legal firm Cort and Cort. The most famous bit of allegations and finger pointing took place during the medical benefits hearings where he publically parted company with the ALP. Whatever you believe or don’t believe you would have to agree that if most of the allegations of corruption were coming from the political party that is now in power it is strange that none of the allegations have even been turned into charges. I don’t believe that the former Bird party was free from corruption and equally I can’t believe that the now ruling UPP party hasn’t found any information on this corruption. It’s very strange indeed.
Anyway, here we are a few days before the general election here in Antigua and millions of dollars have been spent by both parties on their campaigns. Many church leaders and regular people like me have commented on the extravagant waste of money that this campaign has shown. If the communities that needed real help received a small fraction of the moneys spent there on blue and red plastic sheeting, signs, posters, flags, hats, key rings, inflatable hammers, t-shirts, billboards, TV and radio commercials, vinyl lettering and signs, gifts and the like, this island would have been helped tremendously. This election campaign was like a mini US election campaign and we are a poor country. Of course many of the poorest people here thought it was great, but many like me think this has been disgusting. If I were running the country I would try to pass laws very quickly to ban all political posters, banners and billboards from ever showing their ugly faces (I am not speaking about the people on the billboards) on our streets. I would also make sure that any party make public the funding for their election campaigns and also the budgets for these campaigns. This was way way out of hand.
Like I said to start this blog post, we all have stories about the old ALP party. We as a nation voted them out and as a result can speak about those stories without fear. Fear is a strange motivational emotion here on this small island. I keep hearing about poll findings and predictions and often think to myself that if a pollster called me I would find it hard to tell them exactly how I felt. I don’t think any poll can predict who will win this election on Thursday. It seems that if you are thought to be a supporter of one party or another then the party you don’t support is bound to take it personally. So much so sometimes that you can lose your job and much worse. We all know this to be true because after the last election the UPP immediately started firing what they called “Bird People” who worked in government positions. It didn’t matter how well you did your job in the police force or in tourism because as long as people thought you were a “bird person” you were given walking papers. In fact, some of the shortcomings of the UPP are now being blamed on “Bird People” who are still working as “sleeper cells” in government institutions. I guess this is normal all over the world, but when your world is a tiny little island your political affiliation is much more scrutinized. Many of us have to go to our political representatives from time to time requesting help and often we have to go to the various ministries to get things done. It’s here that your perceived political affiliation is even more under scrutiny. “He ah wan Bird man?” is a question I have heard many times. Unlike Errol Cort, who did plenty of work for the ALP government, my Dad John Fuller did a small amount of legal work for Lester Bird. As a result, all of the Fuller family were labeled “Bird People” whoever we voted for. I read the UPP manifesto five years ago and knew I had to vote for change. I publically congratulated the UPP after voting for them and hoped that “what was wrong would be made right” as they had promised. Working almost daily up in the Guiana Island mangrove habitat I was delighted before the election back then to see them say they would turn it into a marine park. That was pre election promise number one to me that they broke by almost immediately giving Allen Stanford the now famous “Green Light”. After they won the election the “green light” to develop the area in what they described as a low impact eco friendly US $700 million dollar project was given. I lost quite a bit of hope at that point as did many others who had voted for them. This was wrong wrong wrong no matter which way you spun it. Anyway, there is so much more history to that story, and what I want to speak about tomorrow is not so much that story or any more horrible ALP stories. Tomorrow I want to speak first hand about UPP stories. The purpose of this blog entry and the one tomorrow isn’t to try to get you to vote one way or another, but to shed some more “sunlight” on things that have been happening here in Antigua over the past five years. I will speak about a labour problem that faces many Antiguans in my business sector and the meeting I had with the Minister of Labour about it. I will speak about the problems that we faced in our sector to do with tourism regulations and the countless meetings that we have had with the former Junior Minister of Tourism and the current Minister of Tourism. I will speak about the unfair business practices and competitive advantages of foreign businesses operating in Antigua and the fraud and tax evasion that are rampant in my sector that I spoke with the Minister of Finance about. I will remind the readers about my dealings with the Minister of Health, my representative, and the sand mining issue. The list goes on an on and on of “wrongs” that were brought to the attention of the various ministries by me and my associates in the tours and excursions sector, and to be honest those wrongs haven’t been made right. More to come on that tomorrow.

Friday, March 06, 2009

a ground swell is coming

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Weather in Antigua like in most places can be interesting and difficult to figure out. Thankfully with the right experience and right set of websites a person these days can have a very good idea about what weather to expect.
I get calls and emails from people each week asking what weather to expect. Most people want to know about rain and as my regular blog readers know, I have written for years on the forums and on this blog about the silly animated forecasts that incorrectly predict rain in Antigua almost 365 days a year. You can read all about these stupid forecasts here in this blog as well as a reasonable idea about how much rain you can expect to find during your vacation to the very dry rain starved island of Antigua. Antigua is one of the driest islands in the Caribbean for a reason: we get very little rain!
Anyway, another common question i get asked is about cloud cover as i have many friends who are photographers and video people. With a live view of both satellite maps and radar imaging for the area around Antigua a person can get an up to the hour picture of what both cloud cover and actual rainfall is doing. Here is an example of the satellite image for today showing Antigua and Barbuda in Red with little cloud cover. Guadeloupe is green and Dominica pink both to the south. St. Kitts and Nevis yellow to the west north west. Most satellite image maps can be put into motion to show a sped up collection of recent images. This movie of images gives you a great idea about what direction the cloud cover is moving. The same things can be done for rainfall by using the radar images. This image below shows the same set of islands with small clusters of rainfall showing up in shades of blue. Again when put into motion you can see which direction the rainfall is moving. Usually they match up with the satellite images and give you an idea about what clouds are producing rainfall. For my snorkeling and sight seeing trips, tours and charters this is all very important because it gives us an idea of what to expect every day before we leave port in the morning. In fact, we at Adventure Antigua get phone calls from the other tours and even some hotels asking for similar information.
Another call I get is from people wanting to know about the wave forecast also known as the surf forecast. Waves and surf often have little to do with the local weather and many times you can have no winds blowing and beautifully sunny skies with huge waves pounding the shores. Sometimes you have moderate winds coming out of the east and huge waves coming from the opposite direction. Ground swell as these long period waves are called are generally generated by windy conditions and storms far from the Caribbean. This is especially the case in the winter when huge cold fronts push off the east coast of North America. Whenever you see super cold nasty conditions on the East Coast we usually can expect ground swell hitting the Caribbean a few days later. The nor-easters as they call those storms way up north push off the coast in cold fronts and churn in the Atlantic sometimes 1500 miles from the Caribbean, but the storms are strong enough to send waves all the way down to the Caribbean and South America. Apart from looking at kids playing in snow on the TV up in the States surfers and mariners have other ways of knowing that a swell is coming. Windguru.com is one of my main weather sites because it has all the info on there for a week's weather including cloud cover, winds and waves. They are usually accurate enough for the heads up on most weather events and they have been forecasting north winds and ground swell all week. The waves and winds were forecast to start coming today and peaking over the weekend into early next week. JD on Xtreme and Tony on the Eco boat called me a while ago to let me know that as expected the swells have started to pick up coming in from the North and wrapping around on to the west coast. For us, ground swells are something that we have to be very careful of because beaches along the normally calm leeward side without the protection of barrier reefs are susceptible to rolling waves. This means we can not collect guests from beaches like Hawksbill, Galley Bay, Jolly Beach, Cocobay and often times Dickenson Bay. Expecting these swells we usually shuttle guests over to St. Johns, Deep Bay and Jolly Harbour where picking them up is very easy. The funny thing about ground swells is that during the "winter" they are only bothersome on these unprotected leeward beaches. Once you get off the shore you barely notice them and as soon as you get past Dickenson Bay going north inside the North Sound you stop seeing them. The barrier islands and reefs keeps that area protected which is perfect for our tours. This ground swell looks big enough to cause beach erosion and other problems with it peaking on Monday, but the surfers have been extremely excited. Most have their boards all ready for the waves and a bunch of my friends have purchased tickets to other islands where the surf is even better during these events. Apart from windguru.com there are many other sites online forecasting waves. The most famous is surfline.com with forecasts for specific areas. It's where i got this image showing the swell arriving from the north into the Caribbean today:
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Their forecasts are the most detailed and most accurate.

Thursday, March 05, 2009

Please be on time for our tours.

We had an strange set of problems with yesterday's Xtreme trip.

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The first thing that happened is that after business hours the day before we had a call saying that a party of 8 wouldn't be coming on Xtreme because they were sick. They were from the cruise ship coming into Antigua the next day, and with Adventure Antigua manager, Nell, having turned people away all week for the fully booked tour the cancellation of 8 at the last minute was not great news. All day we had been getting calls from people wanting to go out the next day. For some reason we had nothing booked for Thursday or Friday but were turning away people for wed. We require 24 hours notice on cancellations which i think is very generous as we only take a small deposit. The group of 8 people said they were all sick and wanted the deposit back.
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Then with the smaller group booked on Xtreme JD and Trevor left Jolly Harbour on time at 8:15 bound for the St. Johns pickup at 8:35 am. (Whenever there is a cruise ship in town the Xtreme tour leaves an hour earlier so that we can be accommodated at Stingray City in between their cruise ship arrivals which sometimes are groups of 200+. We are the only outside tour that stops there and it's always worth doing the tour early in order to be at Stingray City by ourselves.)
JD called us at 8:45 am saying that he had collected four people from the cruise ship as per normal but that two were missing. He had walked the docks looking for them before calling the office. Nell asked JD to wait a bit longer and JD went and spoke to the skipper of Excellence, the other large boat on the dock telling him to keep an eye out for the guests. At 9:05 after another call to the office, JD pulled out of St. Johns bound for the last (and now late) pickup at the Sandals resort. The worst complaint we have ever had on Cruise Critic was that our tour was rushed because so much time was spent waiting for some Sandals guests who didn't turn up. Here we were doing the same thing to them. This sort of thing happens several times a year and the we have to make decisions to leave people who don't turn up every now and then. Actually every week we get no shows and sometimes after a phone call to their hotel room we find out that they don't want to come anymore which saves time and off we go. In the case of cruise ship passengers who booked online and paid deposits we give them the benefit of the doubt and wait around for them for as long as possible.
The Eco Tour boat skippered by Tony comes into St. Johns usually at 9:50 for a 10 am pickup. Yesterday Tony pulled up to find his guests as well as JD's two missing guests. He quickly called JD and then Nell. The guests complained to Nell saying that they were "left". Nell apologised and ordered a cab to take them to Stingray City at our expense (one way US $30). They arrived late there after all of Xtreme's guests had finished swimming in the park. JD took them in and swam with the rays helping them take photos and all the usual stuff they would have done had they been on the boat when it arrived there.
Blue sky at Green Island

The tour went on as usual with the lunch stop at Green Island, the historical tour of Nelson's Dockyard, the snorkeling at Pillars of Hercules, and the deserted beach stop at Rendezvous Bay. boys will be boys
At some time during the day JD overheard the couple saying that they had missed the tour on the island the day before and wondered if they had made mistakes with Caribbean time vs Eastern Time. Anyway, at the end of the tour the guests demanded a discount because they missed two hours of the tour. Jd explained that he was there in St. John's on time and delayed the departure of the tour by 30 minutes which on our tours is almost unheard of. She said this was untrue and that JD must have left when they were in the Exotic Antigua shop thinking they were no shows. JD reminded her that the shop didn't open until 9 am. With that she demanded to speak to the office once again and proceeded to rant and rave (for the second time). I won't mention the things she said, but what i will say is that her bitter complaints were not the only ones we had that day. After she got her additional discounts and left we had complaints from the crew and from the other guests who were disappointed that we paid for her cab fare, disappointed that we gave her $60 in additional discounts to the 10% they received for booking online, disappointed that we permitted her to create such a scene on what would have been an excellent cruise, disappointed that her rants and lateness caused delays in the tour's schedule. Nell and JD both say that in all the years she has been working in this industry yesterday was the most difficult.
As far as the Xtreme tour went yesterday everyone would agree that it could have been better. I am sure that the guests who cancelled last minute want their US $25 deposits back, I am sure that the people who came late want all their money back. I'm sure that JD, Trevor, Nell and Jill would rather not work for me on days like that, and I am sure that the guests who had to endure the saga would have preferred not to have had it happen on their day as well. What do I do to make sure this doesn't happen again?
We have clear instructions of pick up time and place on the emails that go out to our cruise passengers (who rarely have problems). We have boats and crew that arrive on time unless there are problems like this one. I just don't know what to do to avoid this kind of thing from ever happening again. All the guests who were on the boat in St. Johns that morning commented on the fact that Jd's story was legit. We know his story is legit because he called us while he was looking for the guests. Other passengers later commented on this fact too saying they would email their side of the story. What's upsetting is that the unhappy lady actively told Nell on the phone that she would go on the internet and tell her side of the story to do harm. I'd rather not have written this particular blog, but I know that her story will do us harm. That story is that we left her at the dock without a second thought (we were down from 21 people to just 11) and that we were rude, called her a liar, and didn't want to give her any money back after shafting her out of a portion of the tour.
I think if you are planning on coming on one of my tours or any other tour in Antigua please assume that we will be on time and that we may not wait for you if you are late. Please email Nell again if you are unsure of the directions and keep the number which she gives you in your confirmation email as a just in case backup.

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

blue skies and warm winds

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With the madness that is going on here just the week before the the huge general election coupled with the madness still going on with the Stanford saga it's easy to forget how beautiful it is here in Antigua. We all take so much for granted at times like this, and it's important to step back and look around us. The amazing weather we are having at the moment should help you see that despite everything life still is beautiful here on the island. I think it's important to do that just for a short while each day. So many people at the moment are emotionally charged in this politically crazy time that they lose track of what is really important. Each day i get asked who i am voting for and I have such a hard time deciding myself that i don't know what to tell them. I think I will have to make up my mind soon. We have to vote next week! I think i will do some thinking at the beach this weekend!
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Friday, February 27, 2009

Shocking news to Antiguans

Today history was made here in Antigua when parliament was recalled after being dissolved just weeks before a massive general election. They were recalled to debate the compulsory purchase (a.k.a. eminent domain) of R Allen Stanford's lands here in Antigua. The arguments for the purchase were presented and debated, and at the end of it all the "I's had it" and the act was passed. Some 250+ acres of land were taken away from him in order to protect investors claims against those assets and to protect over 800 jobs. I have spent the past two days trying to understand it all and think i have a better idea of why it was done. I spoke to both ALP and UPP lawyers on this. It seems like it may have been the best move to make at this point, and i can explain more about it later. The fact that our government had no legal right under our laws to put a lien or caution on his lands forced them to do the only other thing they could do to protect these assets and that was to compulsory purchase them.
Anyway, that was not the shocking news. What was shocking was the info that came out in the criminal complaint filed in Texas against Allen Stanford's right hand woman, Laura Pendergest-Holt. If you are Antiguan or have any interest in Stanford or his banks then you should read the complaint here. Apart from further providing evidence for this "8 billion dollar fraud" which is of interest to us all, it shows an email between Stanford top execs where they speak about a land purchase. The email shows that Stanford International Bank purchased Pelican Island (which we knew about) and Guiana Island Farms (!!!!) back in 2008. If this email is legit and these two top execs knew what they were talking about then this is the more shocking to many Antiguans than anything so far in the Stanford saga. Again IF this is all true then....this means that apart from the 250+ acres of land that our parliament was recalled to take away from Standford, he also owns about another 2000 acres here which nobody here seemed to know about. In parliament yesterday it was alleged that the Cort and Cort legal firm was on a US $25k retainer monthly from the Stanford group. Mr. Cort did not say this was untrue, and there seems to be quite a bit of talk locally about this connection. I find it very hard to believe this allegation because most retainers here locally are a fraction of that. What i do find strange though is this... There was a legal measure taken by our government against the owners of Guiana Island and the surrounding land preventing them from selling it pending the outcome of a court case where some US $200 million in unpaid taxes (undeveloped land tax) is at stake. I think this is public knowledge, and I would have imagined that if Stanford was going to buy the company owning the land that had this massive figure liened against it, he would have spoken to his lawyers or someone in our Gov. about the problems he would face. Weird that nobody on the island of Antigua knew about Stanford's purchase. I am sure that if the Government knew about this recent purchase then, when for the first time in history as the parliament was called back, they would have taken those 2000 acres too. All super weird.
What is also strange is that SIB has to give monthly and quarterly statements to Antiguan banking authorities here. According to the criminal complaint SIB listed those lands mentioned above as assets on these statements. How did our local off shore banking authorities miss this and fail to let the AG know if this is actually a fact. If i were the Prime Minister or even worse the Attorney General I would be asking some questions about now.

Whales being spotted daily here at the moment

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It's that time of year again when humpback whales are passing through these islands with their young ones.
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JD and his full Xtreme charter last week saw a nice pod off Pillars of Hercules and yesterday I saw a mother and her calf breaching and tail slapping off Indian Creek.
one whale
As my regular blog followers know from my last whale blog, I am like most Antiguans very much against our government's stance on international whaling and I hope that someday we have leadership that stands up to the Japanese and says no to their blood money. Both the former ALP government and the current UPP government support Japanese whaling.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Poor Antigua and Barbuda

First, let me just thank the thousands of people who have viewed my blog entries over the past week. It's been a crazy time for LA (little Antigua) and I wish i could have spent more time keeping you up to date. Anyway, the good news is that the "run" on Bank of Antigua (owned by Allen Stanford) seemed to slow down before the weekend close, and with word that the ECCB is taking over control of the Bank starting today we can further be assured that some needed control will be gained out of this move. Stanford International Bank is another story though. The Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer says he will cooperate fully with the SEC on their probe into the Antiguan registered off shore bank. His attorney general didn't sound so optimistic echoing some of the issues mentioned in my last blog entry.
Found in this damning New York Times piece, AG Justin Simon, said "I’m sure various other offshore companies are going to worry exactly how far S.E.C. control will go.” YUP!
Anyway, while all of this tangled web of organized chaos continues there can be no doubt that people all over the world will be touched in some way. There are depositors at SIB from over 100 countries according to Allen Stanford who boasted about that sort of thing in the past, and there are about as many countries involved with off shore banking who are as worried with the new SEC as the depositors at SIB. According to Melford Nicholas (leader of the OND political party here in Antigua) writing about this story on my facebook page, "I think we are at Act 1 Scene 1".

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In related news, my company got a private charter from a journalist who wanted to do a private version of the Eco Tour. As we usually do on the Eco Tour, i took them into the North Sound to teach them about the history (ancient and modern) as well as the ecology of the area. Of course, like all of our Eco Tour guests this week, he was extremely interested in what we had to say Allen Stanford's interests in the area and especially about Maiden Island and Guiana Islands. While we were up there he asked me about the big white building to our south. I told him that it was Mr. Stanford's boat house and his new EC $67 million dollar (US $26 mil) boat yard which is just being finished up. As it was a private charter I went where he asked me to go and over we went. The marina is like all of Mr. Stanfords buildings.... top notch. Unlike most of his colonial type architecture here on the island this marina was an ultra modern (James Bond) sort of thing, and I assume that his huge boat was inside the NASA style hanger or boathouse.
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The last bit of dredging was taking place and there was a huge cloud of dredged up silt in front of us. I didn't get too close, but what caught my eye was something that had nothing to do with Stanford. Crabs Peninsular is a key commercial port in Antigua with the Antigua Brewery, the desalination plant, Antigua Power Company, Stanfords Marina, a cement loading and off loading facility and other commercial type operations. What caught my eye was a huge sand barge filled to the brim with well over 200 truck loads of pure white Barbuda sand. I know they had over 200 truck loads because for the past 15 years Barbuda sand has been coming from Barbuda to the condemned High Point jetty where i grew up. This jetty was built by the US government in the 1930s i think. Anyway sometime in the mid 1990s sand from Barbuda started arriving there. Up until that point Barbuda sand has been shipped all over the Caribbean and was always imported into Antigua at other commercial ports. Back in the 1990s the opposition accused many within the ALP ruling party of profiting from the mining of sand calling it just another corrupt way for the ALP leaders to get rich. The Lord Nelson Beach Hotel which was owned by my grandparents tried to get the new landing place for sand into Antigua moved complaining that it was damaging their business. Sand trucks raced up and down past the hotel after collecting sand from the massive barges and guests checked out time after time complaining about the noise and dust. Petitions from guests and residents nearby was ignored. With the UPP opposition complaining about corruption and the residents and hotel complaining about noise, dust, and speeding heavy machinery nothing changed. All this time poor little Barbuda was getting scraped clean of it's land. There can be no place on our nation where "Land is sold off" in a more barbaric way than in Barbuda.

Their water table was destroyed and erosion of the beaches closest to the mining started. Local Barbudan environmentalist, John Mussington, confirmed what i thought i was seeing at Palmetto Point. According to John, the erosion on the lee side is different from the seasonal shift in the sandy shoreline, and the vegetation now falling into the sea was signs of something far more sinister. Scientists and other experts testified in court cases introduced by the Barbuda Council during the 80s telling judges that terrible damage was being done. Injunctions after injunctions were issued forcing the mining to stay within a specified boundary. Time and time again the injunctions were ignored and new boundaries were set. On once such occurrence Minister Humphreys was charged with contempt of court. That didn't stop the mining and it continued around the clock. I am told that what the mining interests would do was to change the company names each time an injunction was issued giving the new company permission to get right back to work. In their manifesto five years ago, the UPP said all sorts of nice things for the environment including turning the Guiana Island area into a park. We know from my blogs that they ended up giving Stanford the "green light". When the ALP was in power the UPP had fought against the corruption that they said was happening with Barbuda sand mining. All people concerned about environmental damage and corruption associated with Barbuda mining were hopeful that "What was wrong would be made right". How wrong we were. By the time the UPP took over leadership of Antigua's government, the Barbuda council had been running the Barbuda mining operation for about eight years. Even though the Council were the ones who originally complained about the corruption and negative environmental impact of the mining, they had gone against everything they stood for on the issue, and management of the sand mining had stayed the same. The council was now being lead by Trevor Walker who had aligned himself with the new UPP government in Antigua.
Something happened shortly after Mr. Walker got into power over in Barbuda with environmentalists like John Mussington and many others complaining once again about the sand mining operation, and it was temporarily stopped. I don't know the specifics, but our government stepped in and asked the good old Environment Division to step in. Dian Black Lane who at the time was chief officer within the division helped sort the conflict out by doing some sort of detailed study. According to the politicians, World Cup Cricket was coming to Antigua and a construction boom was taking place, increasing the need for sand used in concrete. They had to continue mining sand otherwise there would be big problems with hosting World Cup Cricket. Using GPS and all sorts of technical mapping equipment, the Environment Division suggested that 103 acres of land in Barbuda be put aside for sand mining, and after that area was mined then sand mining would stop forever in Barbuda. Confused about how much sand was going to be mined in the 103 acres of land which mostly sits a few feet above sea level, Mr. Mussington asked how much sand was actually needed for World Cup cricket and was told by the ministers in charge that it was approximately 800 tons. He then said "ok so about two or thee barge loads". According to John who i called today, he said he didn't get a confirmation on that calculation.
John Mussington says that depending on the barge being used you can have between 200, 400 and even sometimes 800 tons of sand being exported from Barbuda each time one of the many barges pulls out. Anyway, this decision was made back in may 2006, and the mining never stopped. In fact, I always felt that the frequency of barges arriving at High Point increased at that time. To tell you the truth it was the first time that sand started being off loaded through the night. I called my local representative one night and woke him out of his bed. I told the Hon. John Maginley that i was very sorry to wake him up, but i was unable to sleep with all the noise the trucks were making off loading sand. I told him that the house i was living in was covered in a find layer of sand dust. I was surprised at his reply "they still mining sand? I thought they stopped that." Mr. Maginley assured me he would do something about it. He told me later that he had spoken to Wilmouth Daniel about it and was assured that it had been a mistake and wouldn't happen again. Like the sand mining from Barbuda, the offloading of sand at night didn't stop at all. In fact in continued with sometimes several barges arriving at the same time at High Point Jetty. You could see how frenzied they rushed to get the sand loaded, and transported. Many people would call into the radio stations complaining about the speed of the sand trucks. Sand was spilled all over the roads in their rush to drop off sand and quickly return to collect more. Mr. Maginley got tired of me calling and texting his mobile phone and finally stopped replying. As reckless as the sand trucks here in Antigua, the ones in Barbuda were more so. A bus containing small children was hit by one of the trucks ending the lives of several of them from what i remember. (this link was sent to me by "adam" showing a black and white photo of the bus in Barbuda) Sand barges ran onto reefs here in Antigua and Barbuda in their rush to get to and forth, and one even ended up on a beach in Barbuda where it rests today in a pile of rotting metal. When i wrote to the Daily Observer paper about this barge owned by Council member Knackbill Nedd, I was later ridiculed saying that the barge would be moved easily. I wonder if looking at that rotting barge on the beach if Princess Dianna would still think the beach so beautiful?
According to the recommendations from the Environment division back in May of 2006, sand from Barbuda was only to be delivered to Antigua and to nowhere else. I work on boats and travel to islands like St. Martin and St. Barts. If you read my blogs then you know i spend considerable time at sea fishing too. I can say without a shadow of doubt that sand from Barbuda has gone down to St. Martin and passed Antigua heading south as well many times since 2006. This export of sand is not legal in any way shape or form. Many allege that other goods have arrived back in Barbuda from places other than Antigua. The very flimsy controls on the sand mining operation are laughable. One person is employed by the Barbuda council to count truck loads of sand. That is how they know how much sand leaves Barbuda and how much "levy" is due to the Barbuda council. A person doing this job makes between EC $300 and $400 (US $111 and $148) a week doing this job. The operation is 24 hours a day. We have more control here in Antigua at our garbage dump! Apart from the simple math you can do your own calculations. A ton of sand delivered to you is worth EC $90 (US $33) and there are 20 tons of sand in an average sand truck here in Antigua. From this photo I took late last week at Crabs Peninsular, you can imagine how much sand is packed on. I imagine you could make a pretty nice beach with this sand alone, but as i said earlier sand isn't used for making beaches here in Antigua although many other areas around the Caribbean have used Barbuda sand to help their beaches. The sand here is used primarily for construction just like the sand that has been dug up from Pinchin Beach, Farley Bay, McKinnons Swamp, Darkwood Swamp and recenlty Ffryes (a.k.a Fry's). While many have gotten rich the beaches and their fragile and related ecosystems have suffered. Biodiversity in Barbuda has been hit as well and little is known about how badly the island's ecology is being effected. No one involved in any of the mentioned atrocities have ever been punished in any way. According to several people i have spoken with close to the Barbuda sand mining operation, it is alleged that sand from Barbuda is often traded instead of being sold. These people say that persons or companies in Antigua sometimes do business in Barbuda for the Barbuda Council in exchange for sand or barge loads of sand.
According to John Mussington, the 103 acres of land offered that were set aside in the recommendations from the Ministry of Environment has long ago been mined. He says that according to his GPS calculations on the ground, the borders of that 103 acres of land were long ago passed and dug up. John agrees with me that since 2006 there has been a dramatic increase in mining in Barbuda. The more things change in Antigua and Barbuda the more they seem to stay the same. I know that Mr. Maginley will be reading my blog later today so I will ask him once again to consider something:
John, if you say you have no control at all over what happens with the sand mining operation over in Barbuda where between 10 and 15 people are employed then so be it, but don't tell me that there is no other place for sand to come into our country. Notice i didn't mention anything about the even larger barges of gravel that since 2006 have been arriving at High Point almost as regularly as the sand. My photos show sand arriving at the Crabs industrial port. Please tell the people you are asking to vote for you that you will work harder to get all the sand and gravel barges to go there. The restaurants, hotels and residents who exist right next to the condemned high point jetty and along the path of the speeding trucks want you to do something about that at least if nothing about sand mining.
If anyone thinks that something i have written here is untrue or if you feel you would like to add more that i missed please email me at elifuller @ hotmail . com and let me know. You are all free to comment here as well.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

More on the Stanford saga here in Antigua and around the Caribbean.

First i would just like anyone interested in the Stanford saga to read something which many of us have been saying for some time. In fact much of the article seems like it was pulled from my blog :) but the rest of it is just stuff we have been saying here on the island for some time. It's a New York Times piece.

A more more enlightening and interesting article reprinted in the Trinidad Express from the Jamaica Observer is as follows. Ron Saunders used to be our island's representative in the UK.
This article came out long before the Stanford Meltdown here in Antigua, and while today the Levin - Coleman - Obama Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act is being emailed all around the Caribbean it does make the title of the article a bit more poignant. If you would like to see a copy of the act i can email it to you. IT is a clear attack on one of the last things that is holding the weak economies of the Caribbean afloat. Bananas, sugar, off shore gaming, and now banking have all come under attack from foreign policy. This is all very scary for the future of the Eastern Caribbean. (just a side note Allen Stanford never permitted any Internet gaming money to enter his banks and he was very strict about this).

Is the Caribbean financial services sector asleep?

Ronald sanders

Tuesday, February 10th 2009

THE threat to the financial services sector of the Caribbean is growing every day and is becoming more evident in reports by media who have swallowed hook, line and sinker that so-called "tax havens" are helping US, European and Japanese nationals, both persons and companies, to evade taxation in their home countries.There is no hard evidence to support this allegation about Caribbean jurisdictions. Yet it persists from governments of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
A recent BBC report claims that the British government "is broke-a record £44b in the red-and yet one estimate is that the taxman loses £18.5b a year thanks to tax haven abuse''.
The reports specifically identify British protectorates which are described in derogatory terms.
Dramatically, the report also states that "one man has targeted tax haven abuse in the Caymans-and his name is Barack Obama. So change for the world's tax havens seems on the way-whether the leaders of the micro-states like it or not''.
When the OECD first raised its so-called "Harmful Tax Competition Initiative'' aimed at closing down the financial services sector of 41 small jurisdictions around the world which were giving serious competition to the financial institutions of the OECD countries, Caribbean countries were slow to move on the issue.
It was not until it was raised by Antigua and Barbuda at the 21st meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community at Canouan in St Vincent and the Grenadines, in July 2000, that Caricom countries began to take the issue seriously.
A committee was established headed by then Barbados Prime Minister Owen Arthur and present Barbados Chief Justice, Sir David Simmons, and of which I was a part, to engage the OECD in a serious dialogue on this issue. Eventually, the OECD dropped a blacklist of countries that they had produced but only after coercing almost all of the jurisdictions to adopt many of the rules that the OECD had set unilaterally. A so-called "Global Tax Forum'' was also established to set rules for a level playing field for all jurisdictions. But, a report two years ago showed that the main culprits ignoring these rules are the big players in the OECD countries themselves. Poor regulation and supervision in the US and UK, which contributed to the present financial crisis in both countries, is ample evidence of that fact.
President Obama, when he was the senator from Illinois, joined two other senators in introducing the "Stop Tax Havens Abuse Act'' in the US Congress. Fortunately, the Act never became law. But it names 34 jurisdictions as "secrecy'' jurisdictions and among them are all the British Overseas Territories in the Caribbean, all the members of the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States, The Bahamas and Barbados.
The fact that the Bill did not become law does not mean it has been dropped from the Obama administration's agenda. Every indication is that the legislation will be enacted this year, and while the blacklist will be removed, it will be replaced by broad empowerment of the US Treasury Secretary to impose sanctions. The belief persists that "the total loss to the US Treasury from offshore tax evasion alone approaches US$100 billion per year, including US$40 to US$70 billion from individuals and another US$30 billion from corporations engaging in offshore tax evasion''.
Caribbean jurisdictions are regularly examined by the Caribbean Financial Action Task Force and the International Monetary Fund to ensure that they are compliant with the requirements set by the OECD. Many, if not all of them, have Tax Information Exchange Agreements with the US. Banks are required by law, and on pain of the toughest penalties, to make suspicious activity reports and to follow "know your customer'' procedures. Persons trying either to open a second account with a bank they have dealt with for years or transfer money anywhere are well aware of the scrutiny to which they are subjected, the paper they have to sign and the identification they have to provide.
Now, some of the OECD jurisdictions are luring customers away from Caribbean countries on the basis that they will give them better tax breaks and, of course, they are "safe'' jurisdictions. One of the latest companies to shift is the giant engineering and construction company Foster Wheeler Ltd, which is moving its place of incorporation to Switzerland from Bermuda for "tax and other reasons''.
So far there has been no public indication that Caribbean governments are ready to jointly engage the OECD and the US government in particular on these new threats to their financial services sector. Yet they are all at risk, including Guyana, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago-all of whom have passed legislation to offer international financial services.
Similarly, the Caribbean private sector which provides financial services and are in the best position to marshal the arguments and evidence to refute the charges of OECD governments are saying nothing.
When the crunch comes, therefore, those in the private sector, who seem to be sleeping instead of lobbying their governments for joint action should wake up and start pressing the issue fast. The wolf is already at the door.
Sir Ronald Sanders is a business consultant and former Caribbean diplomat.
- Courtesy Jamaica Observer

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

R. Allen Stanford in Antigua...hindsight is 20 20

north sound
I run the eco tour in Antigua. I started doing the tour on a little open boat back in late 1999 when the North Sound of Antigua seen above had a different look. Click here for a large view. Our tour was a eco-historical tour of the area where we spoke about the interesting ecology and history (both ancient and modern). Every day i would mention Mr. Stanford in my talks, and over the years i found it hard not to speak too much. He was changing the way i felt about Antigua and especially about the North Sound, and in the end I hard a hard time accepting the changes. Alan Stanford who had purchased the little Antiguan bank (Bank of Antigua) nearly twenty years earlier was just starting to make big money with his off shore business on the island back in 99, but hadn't made huge expansions in the area at that time. Within five years much changed with huge amounts of construction around the airport and even into the almost virgin North Sound with it's 22 little islands and rocks. By 2003 he was well on his way to having a huge health club for the elite of Antigua and his special clients, he had two airlines as well as a fleet of private jets. He owned most of the land around the airport including the main parking lot and a huge restaurant called the Sticky Wicket. That restaurant was part of the Stanford Cricket Grounds which was probably the most expensive cricket ground in the world. Here you can see happy fans at the final match of the first Stanford 20 20:
picture 328
He owned the largest newspaper on the island http://www.antiguasun.com/ which essentially was his own little PR machine. He owned a large private jet hanger and landing facility which helped him bring in his new mega clients. He owned a massive private yacht, and he was on his way to building marina for his yacht. This marina, "Barnacle Point", would also serve the purpose of getting people to and from his private island which he just purchased. Maiden Island which sits directly in front of the airport was one that I had been using since i started my tour as a shelling and bird watching spot. More to come on that in a while. He had also purchased one of the largest and most beautiful houses on the exclusive Jumby Bay (then tore it down). He purchased another there for one of his executives. He had a printing company which did all sorts of stuff including printing Adventure Antigua brochures! He had a development company which constructed everything he built at the time and had a huge plant nursery. He was by far the largest employer on the island next to the Government. Plans for hotels mega yacht marinas, golf courses marine research centers and all sorts of stuff were in the pipelines. There were many other businesses that i am forgetting but for many of us it all seemed to be too much too soon. When he arrived in Antigua he flew commercial like the rest of us and in no time he had a fleet of jets and started calling himself a billionaire. Ads in Spanish promoting his off shore bank appeared in US magazines and his banking empire grew to several different areas in South America including Panama, Colombia and Venezuela. He gave massive loans to the Government to fund projects like the new hospital for example. IT was alleged that he helped individual local politicians too. Apart from helping the local guys, Mr. Stanford entertained many US congressmen (from both parties) in Antigua at hotels like Curtain Bluff and Jumby Bay and even on mega yachts which spend most winters here on island. By 2005 he stepped up his US lobby campaign by purchasing a lobby research branch of Charles Schwab called the Washington Research Group to help protect his off shore business. "In 2008 he spent US$2.8 million through the lobbying firm Ben Barnes Group, according to records accessed through the Centre for Responsive Politics, which tracks campaign contributions and lobbying." That quote was from this site. His empire was massive and world wide with little Antigua being his main base of operations. He was knighted here and became Sir Allen......!

I didn't bank with Stanford and encouraged my immediate family not to either, so the banking situation was never a worry for me directly. What was always a worry was that this day when the US government finally (for whatever reason) decided to clamp down on his operation would come. As i am sure you have seen, Stanford and a few of his partners have been charged by the SEC with a massive 8 billion dollar fraud based on the allegation that he sold high yielding CD's that provide unsubstantiated returns. Whatever that all means i am not sure, but there has since been a run on his local bank and his off shore banks here, in the US, in Panama, in Colombia, and in Venezuela. For long I worried that the massive empire he grew here in Antigua would come crumbling down, and they have never been as shaky as they are today. Thankfully many of the local Stanford businesses mentioned above have closed down over the past few years and the ripple effect of what is happening now may not be as drastic had he been in control of it all now. What would have been worse would have been if he had been half way through tearing up the North Sound as were his plans. The Antigua general election is gonna be on March 12th and the opposition had been banking on Allen Stanford's money for their campaign as well as his massive $700+ million dollar development of the North Sound at Guiana Island. The ALP website is still talking about bringing the much anticipated Stanford projects online stimulating jobs and growth. Stanford's "I believe" campaign to develop the area came to a stop after a fight with the current PM last year. Since then he's been fairly quiet on that concept. Of course he was anything but quiet with his international Cricket 20 20 competitions. In fact he got plenty of bad press in the UK. I wrote about that in this blog here. Anyway, his development of Maiden Island stopped my regular Eco Tour stops there and only some of my first guests will remember us stopping every day there. I got tired of his personal security guards telling me to get off the island, and it made the tour look bad too. As mentioned in the end we stopped going there.
In fact this image is probably the last one of an official tour stop there some time back in 2003. Maiden was taken over by the Stanford Development Company around that time and it quickly became a construction project. He manipulated many by telling them he was helping repair damaged coral reefs while in reality he was dredging up healthy mangroves and delicate flats systems covered in coral species that live in turtle grass systems. I spoke quite a bit about that and included photos in an article i wrote back then. The papers here were not that interested in talking about that side of things back then. Here is the article i wrote that was only published in the end on my blog. These mangroves seen in this pic that i took before he took over maiden island lasted about a week and then were pushed down to make way for the landing craft carrying heavy machinery.
Picture-679sm
A place that i had visited all my life enjoying the incredible and complex ecosystems that it supported was very quickly turned into a construction project, and we were asked not to get off our boats whenever we got too close. My Eco Tour just picked a different spot to stop and the tour went on as normal, but this time with a little more info about Stanford and his dealings. I can't imagine anyone back then investing money into his banks after listening to my "rant" as one tourist described it on an internet forum. I may have talked too much back then, but i am sure that some people may have ended up saving money as a result. There are hundreds of stories that will surface about his dealings here locally and internationally and i am sure there are as many positive stories as their are negative ones. We here in Antigua were fortunate that he did many good things for our country and like many i was never really sure if having him here doing all that he did was better for the country or worse. There were many positive things created by him and I'm sure that although the immideate future of all his assets are up in the air, his footprint here will be around for some time. We don't even know where he is at this time, so there will be much more to this story. At the moment there is a run still going on at his local bank and i think all the off shore accounts are frozen. I spent a few hours at the Airport branch of the Bank of Antigua today waiting to pick up a friend who was closing his account there. These images show people who had been waiting for hours and hours. My friend got there long before they opened at 8 am and didn't get his money until 1 PM. He was only able to get a fraction of his money in cash and the rest in the form of a draft. Businesses in Antigua have started telling customers that they will not accept Bank of Antigua checks. The implications are huge and i will try to keep you up to date with more. For now you can also goto www.caribarena.com. Forget trying to get info from Stanford's Paper. They had nothing about it today!