CHTA president predicts rapid return of Caribbean tourism jamaicaobserver.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jamaicaobserver.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Courthouse Records - Worcester Central District Court
By Debbie LaPlaca
Judge Robert J. Pellegrini
James M. Singleton Jr., 43, of North Grosvenordale, Conn., charged with vandalizing property, and assault and battery, continued to April 12.
Pablo Torres, 41, of 145 Essex St., Apt. 4, Swampscott, charged with carrying a firearm without license (3rd offense), firearm violation with three prior violent/drug crimes, carrying loaded firearm without license, receiving stolen motor vehicle, firearm without FID card (subsequent offense), improper storage of firearm, uninsured motor vehicle, driving with suspended license (criminal subsequent offense), driving with suspended registration, unregistered motor vehicle, no inspection/sticker, and speeding, continued to Jan. 29.
31 December 2020
The president of the Caribbean Hotel & Tourism Association (CHTA) has predicted the Caribbean will see a return of tourism to the region “faster than many parts of the world.
Pablo Torres said this was thanks to the protocols and partnerships implemented throughout the region to help lessen the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Averring 2021 would be a year of recovery, Torres declared: “Tourism is our key to recovery, to restoring the livelihood of thousands of employees in our industry, to reopening our doors, and welcoming our guests.”
In addition to replenishing tax revenues to cash-strapped governments, Torres noted that a tourism revival would refresh and renew “the minds, bodies and spirits of millions of travellers who will discover that the Caribbean is the best place on earth to recover from the ravage of this pandemic”.
2:34 am UTC Dec. 17, 2020
Marion Phillips outside her home in Bradenton, Fla. in late 2019.THOMAS CORDY, PALM BEACH POST
They came on a sweltering August evening in 2015, to Marion Phillips’ first-floor apartment in Bradenton, past the sanitation department, the juvenile detention center, Ramirez Auto, and a soup kitchen named Our Daily Bread. Four cops and an investigator with the Florida Department of Children and Families.
They were there to look at Abby’s leg.
Someone, maybe a teacher, had noticed it earlier that day: A multicolored bruise stretching across the back of the 6-year-old’s left thigh. Pablo Torres, Marion’s boyfriend, admitted he had spanked Abby with a belt while Marion was at work.
2:34 am UTC Dec. 17, 2020
Marion Phillips outside her home in Bradenton, Fla. in late 2019.THOMAS CORDY, PALM BEACH POST
They came on a sweltering August evening in 2015, to Marion Phillips’ first-floor apartment in Bradenton, past the sanitation department, the juvenile detention center, Ramirez Auto, and a soup kitchen named Our Daily Bread. Four cops and an investigator with the Florida Department of Children and Families.
They were there to look at Abby’s leg.
Someone, maybe a teacher, had noticed it earlier that day: A multicolored bruise stretching across the back of the 6-year-old’s left thigh. Pablo Torres, Marion’s boyfriend, admitted he had spanked Abby with a belt while Marion was at work.