THE EDITOR, Madam: The allocation of funds to members of parliament (MPs) for the repair of roads and the request of the prime minister for a list of roads in need of repairs directly from the MPs, are undermining the importance for local.
Developing Jamaica into a more robust global logistics centre, that connects the Americas to the rest of the world, has been outlined as a key aim of the Andrew Holness administration. The Government’s intention to promote economic expansion at.
Government Minister Matthew Samuda has promised greater oversight of the real estate industry, even as he acknowledged that the sector has outgrown regulatory bodies such as the National Environment and Planning Agency (NEPA) and the National Works Agency (NWA). “As an industry we have to hold each other accountable. There are many things that we need to do to get things right in that approval process many things that.
GROUND is to be broken for the construction of a $450-million Type V health facility in Portmore in July this year as the Government moves another step further in giving the Sunshine City parish status. This is according to Prime Minister Andrew Holness, who said the facility, which “is practically a hospital” will eventually be developed into a full-fledged hospital a vital infrastructure necessary for an area to be deemed.
The 63 Members of Parliament (MPs) will each be allocated a minimum of $150 million under the Government’s ambitious $40 billion SPARK programme to rehabilitate the country’s creaking road network. Remaining amounts will be allocated to each constituency depending on the volume of the road network to be repaired to ensure fairness, while an amount will be reserved by the Government to address roads that may not have been considered.