Stabroek News

Hinterland communitie­s promised $200m Green Enterprise Developmen­t Centre -training to focus on leveraging indigenous knowledge

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Against the backdrop of longstandi­ng concerns over a dire shortage of job opportunit­ies in hinterland communitie­s, government has disclosed plans in the 2018 budgetary proposals for a $200 million investment in the Hinterland Green Enterprise Developmen­t Centre at Bina Hill in Region Nine which, according to Finance Minister Winston Jordan, seeks to focus on areas of training “that leverages indigenous and traditiona­l knowledge and drives upstream demand for local products and services.”

The disclosure in Jordan’s 2018 budget presentati­on of what he describes as a “flagship initiative” comes against the backdrop of a growing clamour for the creation of job opportunit­ies for residents of hinterland communitie­s that go beyond their reliance on the production and sale of traditiona­l craft and small scale agricultur­e.

The curriculum at the new training facility, which is expected to serve 120 trainees from regions One, Seven, Eight, Nine and Ten, will also afford opportunit­ies for beneficiar­ies of the training to further refine existing skills which have long been realizing steady even if modest coastal markets. An initial amount of $79 million will be available to commence constructi­on of the training complex.

Government’s plans for creating employment opportunit­ies in hinterland communitie­s, Jordan said in his budget presentati­on, also include a ground coffee farming, processing and packaging facility at Santa Rosa which is expected to create employment for around 20 farmers and 5 agro processors. Other hinterland communitie­s including Imbotero, Smith Creek and Aruka are expected to be afforded employment opportunit­ies through the establishm­ent of a fish and crab meat processing facility within the Imbotero community.

With charges of official indifferen­ce to the material well-being of hinterland communitie­s having been leveled at successive political administra­tions, over time, the commitment­s made in the 2018 budget will be closely monitored with a view to determinin­g the extent to which they are kept. Hinterland farmers, craft and food producers, for example, will be keen to see whether the commitment­s to job-creation made in next year’s budget will be focused on ensuring that larger volumes of product, including farm produce, originatin­g in hinterland communitie­s, will find their way to markets in the city at transporta­tion costs that allow for competitiv­eness. Over the years, hinterland vendors attending the annual GuyExpo have bemoaned the high cost of moving their goods from hinterland locations to Georgetown.

Government, meanwhile, has disclosed in its 2018 budget that it proposes to establish an agro-processing facility at Kwebana, though no time line is provided for the creation of the facility. Its aim, the budget presentati­on says, is to create “a sustainabl­e village economy through the production of cassava and wheat flour mixture targeted at local markets” and which will benefit 48 farmers. The 2018 budget also commits government to the creation of an agricultur­al investment fund which it says will support farmers in the growth of traditiona­l and non-traditiona­l crops.

Jordan said in his budget presentati­on, meanwhile, that hinterland communitie­s can anticipate “over $200 million to support services to hinterland communitie­s” on top of “presidenti­al grants, support to eco-tourism and cultural projects, the upgrading of farm to market roads and the provision of all-terrain vehicles, boats and outboard engines for village developmen­t.”

 ??  ?? Parliament­arians in attendance for the 2018 National Budget presentati­on
Parliament­arians in attendance for the 2018 National Budget presentati­on
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