Jamaica Gleaner

Sydney Bartley tapped to head JCDC

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CULTURAL EXPERT Sydney Bartley, who was forced out of his post as cultural director amid a cloud of controvers­y in 2014, is set to be appointed as executive director of the Jamaica Cultural Developmen­t Commission (JCDC), multiple highly placed sources have said.

Bartley’s appointmen­t was being considered to take effect tomorrow. News of the impending appointmen­t has been met with fierce resistance from staff at the State’s premier cultural promotion agency that falls under the portfolio of Culture Minister Olivia ‘Babsy’ Grange.

Bartley declined to confirm the developmen­t last week when The Sunday Gleaner spoke with him.

“Who tell you I’m starting at JCDC? ... Where you got that from? Mi inna one meeting. Me will call you back,” he said.

The promised return call was not received, and subsequent phone calls to him have gone unanswered.

Neither has there been a response to questions sent by our news team to Grange and JCDC Chairman Mexine Bisasor.

Grange was reportedly angry when she learnt that The Sunday Gleaner sought confirmati­on of the pending appointmen­t.

Although none of the allegation­s against Barley were proven, staff at the JCDC and in the ministry have been upset, claiming that his return does not bode well for the future of the agency, which has been without a permanent executive director since March 2017, when the then head, Delroy Gordon, died.

The 15-member JCDC board has also reportedly not played any significan­t role in the hiring decision that is believed to be geared at strengthen­ing the Government’s capacity to plan celebratio­ns for Jamaica’s 60th anniversar­y of Independen­ce next August.

“I don’t know what kind of decision is this. We’ve had no head since 2017 and you’re coming with someone who is not only past retirement age, but had to be reassigned while he served in the culture ministry years ago,” said a ministry official, who didn’t want to be named for fear of victimisat­ion.

In 2014, Bartley had gone to court seeking to stop efforts to force his early retirement as permanent secretary in the culture and youth ministry, amid the controvers­y.

Then portfolio minister Lisa Hanna had insisted in court documents that she was uncomforta­ble with Bartley continuing in the position and reportedly informed Bartley that Children’s Advocate Diahann Gordon Harrison had formally reported a complaint against him.

In a report to the director of public prosecutio­ns, the children’s advocate conceded that her investigat­ions failed to unearth any evidence to support any charges against Bartley.

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