Stabroek News

Nine-year-old among three new COVID-related deaths in Barbados

- Dear Editor,

(Barbados Nation) A nine-year-old is among three people who passed away as a result of coronaviru­s (COVID-19), bringing the number of deaths to 28, the Ministry of Health and Wellness said a short while ago.

There were 126 new positive COVID19 cases on Monday, February 15.

The new cases include results of samples from over a 12-day period, as the Best-dos Santos Public Health Laboratory works to reduce the backlog created by the temporary use of manual extraction in the processing of samples.

The laboratory conducted 1 251 tests on Monday.

Thirty-eight people recovered and were discharged from isolation. There are now 731 active cases.

Three COVID-19 deaths were recorded

– a 74-year-old woman from a nursing home; an 88-year-old woman with comorbidit­ies; and a nine-year-old child. The nine year-old passed away at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital on Sunday. Their deaths bring the death toll from the virus to 28 The 126 cases comprise 58 women and 68 men. Of these, 125 are Barbadians and one is a non-national.

The total number of people diagnosed as positive at Her Majesty’s Prisons Dodds is 363. Of these, 361 have recovered and the remaining two inmates are included in the active cases.

Barbados has recorded 2 457 confirmed cases – 1 090 females and 1 367 males – and 1 698 persons have recovered. Since February 2020, the public health laboratory has completed 115 813 tests.

The key is to effectivel­y manage the various budgetary allocation­s.

The national budget is pegged at $383.1 Billion dollars which as an amount is difficult to conceive in real terms. The late President Ronald Reagan, a skillful communicat­or described one of his budgeted amounts by stating that if you were to stack US$100 together, it would fill the entire Empire State Building. A similar vivid imagery of our $383.1B budget would be if you were to stack $5,000 notes together, it would probably fill our National Stadium at Providence up to roof level about four times. This is a lot of money, hence we have to ensure that it is effectivel­y managed in a sustainabl­e, transparen­t and cost effective manner.

We have to ensure among the following:1. The preparatio­n and awarding of bids for all central and local government tenders are in accordance with the regulation­s of the National Procuremen­t and Tender Administra­tion Act. We should avoid sole sourcing and secret tenders, they raise a lot of unsavory questions.

2. Every drain that is dug, every road that is being built must be done to approved standards. If the depth of the canal is to be dug to twelve feet, that does not translate to 10 or 9 feet.

If the asphaltic layer for the road is specified at six inches then it should be no less. For too long we have been tolerating substandar­d works that deteriorat­e quickly and have to be redone at taxpayers’ expense.

3. We have to ensure proper inventory management of medical drugs and fuel procured by the budgetary funds. Year after year we continue to receive audit reports of wasted and expired drugs running into the billions. This is a terrible tragedy given that some of our people die because of a lack of drugs.

With regards to fuel used for the drainage and irrigation projects, it appears the phenomenon of the black hole operates where copious amounts of diesel just disappear without any trace. We have to zealously guard against this extreme wastage.

4. The various revenues and capital works identified for each community must have majority local content. If a drain is to be dug, a school or community centre to be built, roads or streets to be paved it must employ the people from that community. This is what empowers individual­s and keeps them in their communitie­s.

5. We have to curb bureaucrat­ic extravagan­ces. It is almost comical to see the length of the security details for our government officials in the absence of any real or perceived threats. For a people with three quarters of a million in population, our security details outclass developed countries with over four hundred million people as well as those Afghan warlords. It is a terrible waste. I have seen vehicles of government officials running for hours while they are in a conference just to keep it cool when they emerge. All the unnecessar­y lunches, fabricated allowances, irrelevant meetings are milking our resources. The government bureaucrac­y is bloated and needs to be trimmed of its fat.

The budget is fairly balanced and has something for all the various sections of our society but until and unless we manage our monies effectivel­y, real developmen­t will always be elusive and we will continue to have bigger and bigger budgets to no avail.

Yours sincerely, Reggie Bhagwandin

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