Jamaica Gleaner

Housing CRH facilities cripples church programmes – pastor

- Christophe­r Thomas / Gleaner Writer

PASTOR GLEN Samuels, the president of the West Jamaica Conference (WJC) of Seventh-day Adventists in Montego Bay, is concerned that his organisati­on’s mentorship and skills training programmes will suffer if he continues to house some of the department­s from the neighbouri­ng Cornwall Regional Hospital (CRH). “It is a challenge because we committed ourselves to it as a church that serves the community, and we were aware that it would significan­tly curtail our activities, especially now that we are coming into December,” said Samuels, who offered sections of the church to house some of the hospital’s department­s after noxious fumes forced the closure of some sections of the hospital.

The most significan­t challenge is the building closest to the main office because we finished that building in 2017, and that was built to house our skills training, especially with our commitment to mentor ship ,” Samuels explained to The Gleaner on Tuesday.

The WJC president said that continued housing of the department­s they are catering to could impact the WJC’s upcoming quadrennia­l report on its mentorship programme, a report which is delivered every four years.

“Next year is the final full year in terms of the quadrennia­l reporting period, and I really would not want the quadrenniu­m (fouryear period) to finish without at least delivering on that strategic initiative. There are persons overseas, in the diaspora, who want to help us with the equipment and other stuff for our mentorship and skills training, so the question of continued aid to the CRH is well timed,” said Samuels.

“We will still struggle to keep the commitment with our auditorium, where they (CRH) have about 30 cubicles inside that section. I am still struggling with how long we can give up the mentorship building that we built for the skills training programme, so that is the most significan­t part of the struggle,” added Samuels.

The WJC has been providing its conference centre to house some of the CRH’s department­s since 2017. The department­s being housed include the hospital’s antenatal clinic, physiother­apy department, and several l ab operations.

The CRH, which was built in 1974, began experienci­ng a noxious fumes issue in September 2016, which forced medical personnel to vacate the 400-bed hospital’s accident and emergency department, which occupied the bottom floor of the 10-storey Type A hospital.

The timeline for the hospital’s restoratio­n was set for next month, but last month, the independen­t oversight committee monitoring the restoratio­n work announced that the rehabilita­tion works, which include repairing the facility’s tower, has been pushed back to 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

 ?? FILE ?? A section of the Cornwall Regional Hospital, St James.
FILE A section of the Cornwall Regional Hospital, St James.

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