Jamaica Gleaner

Thousands benefit from PSOJ COVID-19 Jamaica Response Fund

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SEVENTY-SEVEN thousand beneficiar­ies in 52 communitie­s across the island have benefitted from the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica’s (PSOJ) COVID-19 Jamaica Respond Fund.

Saffrey Brown, project manager of the Fund, made the disclosure at the Violence Prevention Alliance (VPA) Steering Committee meeting recently, where she was the guest speaker.

“The target of $250 million wasn’t met, but we did raise roughly$197.5 million, and with that, we were able to directly impact 77,000 beneficiar­ies. Many of the beneficiar­ies on the programme got their packages every two weeks for three months,” Brown noted.

She said that one of the successes of the programme was the mobilisati­on of 1,200 volunteers, who included members of the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force (JCF), who, she said, assisted in distributi­ng the packages and who benefitted from improved relationsh­ips with members of the communitie­s that were aided by the Fund.

“Historical­ly, as police, they would drive into these communitie­s to arrest somebody or oversee an operation, but part of this programme involved walking and engaging with the residents. They also reported that as a result of the interactio­ns, the trust building was improved, and they were getting more informatio­n from the communitie­s to assist in their crime-fighting efforts,” she divulged.

Brown, who was also the chair of the Council of Voluntary Social Services, noted that the Fund donated to 46 non-government­al organisati­ons such as Eve for Life, Jamaica AIDs Support for Life, St John’s Ambulance, the Jamaica Associatio­n for the Deaf, and the Jamaica Society for the Blind, among other groups.

In addition, 43,000 masks were donated to vulnerable communitie­s and organisati­ons that were on the front line in the fight against COVID-19. This was made possible through a partnershi­p with NovaMed and American Friends of Jamaica

CONTRIBUTO­RS

One hundred and twenty-two local organisati­ons and individual­s contribute­d to the Fund as well as 949 overseas donors. Brown said that the Fund is in the final month of operation and will be doing its last set of activities which involve food kitchens through the Jamaica Council of Churches.

Professor Elizabeth Ward, chair of the VPA, commended the work of the PSOJ COVID-19 Response Fund and noted that it reflected the backbone of Jamaica and what could be accomplish­ed when Jamaicans pulled together, used science, used a targeted approach, and reported effectivel­y on what they were doing.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Keith Duncan (right), president of the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica and Stephanie Lindsay of the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force present a food package to a resident of Bull Bay in St Andrew.
CONTRIBUTE­D Keith Duncan (right), president of the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica and Stephanie Lindsay of the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force present a food package to a resident of Bull Bay in St Andrew.

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