Jamaica Gleaner

Brain drain crippling Westmorela­nd, says chamber boss

- Albert Ferguson/Gleaner Writer editorial@gleanerjm.com

WESTMORELA­ND IS suffering from a major brain drain as increasing numbers of highly trained and qualified workers are leaving the parish to live overseas or migrate to other regions of Jamaica, says a leading business lobbyist.

Moses Chybar, interim president of the Westmorela­nd Chamber of Commerce (WCC), said infrastruc­tural developmen­t and a rise in the standard of living would be strong pull factors appealing to residents who might be tempted to leave.

“The brilliant scholars, those who are graduating with all these high grades and moving on to become doctors and scientists, they don’t stay in Westmorela­nd,” said Chybar, who was speaking at Wednesday’s relaunch of the WCC at Hotel Commingle in the parish capital, Savanna-la-Mar.

“Most of them are either going overseas or going to Kingston. That, I think, is creating a negative impact on the community because we need to engage some of those people to stay here in Westmorela­nd to help build the community.”

The chamber boss believes that the situation will not ease unless the right climate is created to convince skilled residents to stay and develop the parish instead of leaving.

Chybar said that the relaunched chamber should find creative ways for business entities to engage gifted scholars as part of the overall plan to build Westmorela­nd into a viable parish with opportunit­ies for advancemen­t.

“If we are not visible, in a way that they can feel that there is something powerful going on here, that there is a movement, that we can jump on and get going, then they are going to go,” he noted.

Chybar singled out entities such as Gray’s Pepper, Easispice, and the frozen processed meats division of GraceKenne­dy as some of the domestic companies that have global reach and that are proof that positive things are happening in Westmorela­nd.

“When I travel and look on (supermarke­t) shelves overseas, I not only see products bottled in Jamaica, but products from right here in Westmorela­nd,” said Chybar.

 ?? KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Score of commuters wait in the rain at the downtown bus terminus for public transporta­tion to take them to Portmore, St Catherine, on Thursday. Some persons said they had been waiting for more than an hour.
KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Score of commuters wait in the rain at the downtown bus terminus for public transporta­tion to take them to Portmore, St Catherine, on Thursday. Some persons said they had been waiting for more than an hour.

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