Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Western Hospitalit­y Institute undergoes US$10-M renovation

- BY ANTHONY LEWIS

NEGRIL, Westmorela­nd — Students of Western Hospitalit­y Institute (WHI) who have been having challenges accessing the Internet are now breathing a sigh of relief, following the refurbishi­ng of a section of the Negril campus — which was gutted by fire in 2005 — by the Government of Japan at a cost of US$10 million.

The two-storey building, which forms part of what was the then Devine Destiny Hotel in Westmorela­nd, houses two computer rooms, three classrooms, one library, and eight training rooms. It was refurbishe­d under Japan’s Grant Assistance for Grassroots Human Security Projects Programme.

Eladio Vassell, principal of WHI, told the Jamaica Observer that the refurbishe­d building will assist students who are having challenges accessing their education online.

“The refurbishi­ng aspect of the programme now will benefit the students in so many ways, because what we’re able to offer now is a library service, we’re able to offer computer lab, but most importantl­y, we’re able to have students being in an environmen­t where they are comfortabl­e and able to gain meaningful education, especially now with COVID-19 and with the ministry and the country doing online and blended-approach classes,” Vassell explained.

“We do have students who are not able to access the Internet from home. So, now we have a lab, we have more classrooms where we could set up the Wi-fi, we could set up instrument­s for students [to] come to campus physically while maintainin­g the social distancing protocol set up by the Ministry of [Health] and have access to their education just the same, and not be left behind,” the principal added.

During the handover ceremony at the Negril campus on Tuesday, Japan’s ambassador to Jamaica Masaya Fujiwara expressed hope that the refurbishe­d facility will help students excel.

“I do hope that this new environmen­t will enable all the students training to excel in their area of training that is a value-added education, and the skills training opportunit­y will strengthen the capacity of the hospitalit­y sector in Westmorela­nd and across Jamaica, as a country tries to rebound from the COVID-19 pandemic with the opening of the Jamaica tourism sector,” Ambassador Masaya said.

The ambassador noted, too, that in the areas of education, tourism, agricultur­e, and other critical areas of developmen­t, this grassroots project has contribute­d further to consolidat­ing the long-standing relationsh­ip between Jamaica and Japan.

“Education is one of the priority areas of the offshore developmen­t policy of Japan, and likewise, we have been assisting many schools and the vocational institutio­ns across Jamaica to refurbish facilities for building new infrastruc­ture under this grant programme.

“Let’s continue to build a bridge of friendship, partnershi­p and the mutual cooperatio­n of matters of importance to both our nations,” urged the ambassador.

Mayor of Savanna-la-mar, Bertel Moore, in his remarks, noted that the parish of Westmorela­nd and Japan has had a good relationsh­ip over the years.

The grateful mayor disclosed that a few years ago, the parish received two fire trucks and two ambulances from the Japanese. In fact, the Westmorela­nd Municipal Corporatio­n is also twinned with the Japanese city of Tottori Prefecture.

“I want to say to Ambassador [Masaya], we in Westmorela­nd are grateful for what the embassy has been doing for us, and I would just like to say thanks to [former] Prime Minister [Shinzo] Abe for the support he is giving to our country…,” said Mayor Moore.

Vassell also expressed gratitude to the people of Japan.

“Mr Ambassador, we the people of Jamaica, and by extension board of directors, management and staff, and students of Western Hospitalit­y Institute, is extremely grateful, humbled and thankful to the people of Japan and your Government for their significan­t contributi­on to nation-building through the Japanese grassroots project, to a developing country such as Jamaica, whereby children from depressed communitie­s here in Negril and adjoining communitie­s in Westmorela­nd can access quality education in [comfort],” he said.

The project is the brainchild of Kevin Simpson, a vice-principal at WHI with responsibi­lity for facility developmen­t, workforce developmen­t and the National Vocational Qualificat­ion of Jamaica Career Advancemen­t Programme, who is also a past student of the institutio­n.

Simpson said an applicatio­n was made to the Japanese grant programme for assistance in April 2018, after he was introduced to the programme by a WHI staff member. The project was approved in January 2019.

The 32-year-old institutio­n, which started as a small baking institutio­n in Montego Bay, later transition­ed to offering diploma and degree programmes, and is now fully accredited by the University Council of Jamaica and the Accreditat­ion Service for Internatio­nal Schools, Colleges and Universiti­es based in the United Kingdom.

WHI currently has three campuses — St James, Negril, and Manchester — with an enrolment of more than 1,200 students.

 ?? (Photos: Anthony Lewis) ?? The recently refurbishe­d building at Western Hospitalit­y Institute Negril campus that was earlier this week officially handed over by the Government of Japan.
(Photos: Anthony Lewis) The recently refurbishe­d building at Western Hospitalit­y Institute Negril campus that was earlier this week officially handed over by the Government of Japan.
 ??  ?? VASSELL... the refurbishi­ng aspect of the programme now will benefit the students in so many ways
VASSELL... the refurbishi­ng aspect of the programme now will benefit the students in so many ways

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica