Jamaica Gleaner

Scores of youth recruited to boost agri services

- Christophe­r Serju/ Senior Gleaner Writer christophe­r.serju@gleanerjm.com

AYOUTH training programme is geared at closing the massive gap in Jamaica’s complement of agricultur­al extension officers, the technical personnel who operate as key liaisons with the island’s farmers.

The first cohort of 40 young women and men under the age of 35 will commence training in December under the Agricultur­e Aide Programme following Tuesday’s signing of a memorandum of understand­ing between the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Fisheries and the HEART Trust and the HOPE Programme.

Upon graduation, the agricultur­al aides will be qualified to matriculat­e to further training and may be enlisted in the ranks of the agricultur­al ministry, which has a staff of 99 extension officers serving at least 223,000 registered farmers.

That complement is well below the worldwide best-practice minimum ratio of one extension officer to 500 farmers.

“Our extension ratio is about one to over 2,000 farmers,” said Agricultur­e Minister Floyd Green.

“We believe that we have crafted a programme that will allow us to extend our extension services while training our young people in the fundamenta­ls of agricultur­e to ensure that our agricultur­e sector goes forward.”

The aides will be recruited through the Hope Programme and engage in classes by HEART before fanning out into the fields to undergo further technical training by Rural Agricultur­al Developmen­t Authority (RADA) personnel. Following six months of training, they will be assessed and certified to work alongside, and under, the guidance of extension officers.

One hundred people will be trained under a three-year contract between the agricultur­e ministry and the HEART Trust and will form a “preferred pool of applicants for our extension services,” Green said.

A budget of $10.8 million has been aside for the project, under which the trainees will be paid $11,000 per week.

Meanwhile, CEO of RADA, Peter Thompson, is excited about the programme and the prospects for increased technical support.

“These persons when they come to us will be trained in data gathering and assessment­s, and, of course, some of them will, if they are so inclined, be trained in some of the technical areas so that they can assist extension officers,” said Thompson.

Permanent Secretary Dermon Spence sees the Agricultur­e Aide Programme as a window of opportunit­y for youth who might be undecided about a career path in farming.

“We believe that this programme will provide a window through which our young people will gain the insight that we want them to have into the career duties that abound in the agricultur­al sector. So we are looking forward to this vigorous engagement,” said Thompson.

 ?? KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Minister of Health and Wellness Dr Christophe­r Tufton says thanks to Lim Baejin (centre), charge d’affaires of the Republic of Korea in Jamaica, for the donation of a new COVID-19 testing machine during a handover ceremony at the Ministry of Health and Wellness on Tuesday. Looking on is Foreign Affairs Minister Kamina Johnson Smith while partly hidden is Dr.Michelle Hamilton, director of the National Laboratory Services.
KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Minister of Health and Wellness Dr Christophe­r Tufton says thanks to Lim Baejin (centre), charge d’affaires of the Republic of Korea in Jamaica, for the donation of a new COVID-19 testing machine during a handover ceremony at the Ministry of Health and Wellness on Tuesday. Looking on is Foreign Affairs Minister Kamina Johnson Smith while partly hidden is Dr.Michelle Hamilton, director of the National Laboratory Services.

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