Jamaica Gleaner

Gov’t mulls removing SLB guarantor requiremen­t for all applicants

-

THE GOVERNMENT is actively considerin­g removing the guarantor requiremen­t for Students’ Loan Bureau (SLB) applicants.

This was disclosed by Prime Minister Andrew Holness while responding to a question posed regarding higher education during his rap session with students at the Guy’s Hill High School in St Catherine on Thursday, January 18.

“Let’s start with what is generally available, and that is the student loan. You know that this administra­tion has removed the requiremen­t for having two guarantors, so now you only need one. But we are also actively considerin­g removing this business of a guarantor,” the prime minister said.

Effective April 1, 2021, students applying for an SLB loan now only require one guarantor instead of two.

Additional­ly, since September 2023, Programme of Advancemen­t Through Health and Education (PATH) beneficiar­ies applying to the SLB do not need guarantors to support their submission­s.

The no-guarantor policy also applies to wards of the State.

Holness also indicated that various grants are available for students.

“If qualified under PATH, if you’re a student whose family is on PATH, then you get a grant, a fairly substantia­l grant, to go to [a] tertiary institutio­n; and if you are a student from an underserve­d community, a student who is in a vulnerable situation, then there are other grants for which you can apply, and your circumstan­ces will be assessed, and you can get a grant, ”he pointed out.

SCHOLARSHI­P OPPORTUNIT­IES

Holness said the Government has also instituted measures to offer several scholarshi­ps for students pursuing studies in science, technology, engineerin­g, and mathematic­s (STEM).

“[Approximat­ely] 100 of them have been awarded by the Ministry of Finance [and the Public Service] for our students to study in the STEM field. We have also put in place several other programmes where we sponsor people in critical skills, and there are many scholarshi­ps [for] which you have to go through the Ministry of Finance,” he said.

The prime minister noted out that several scholarshi­p opportunit­ies are provided by other local and overseas institutio­ns and agencies and encouraged students to apply for these.

He said the Government remained committed to achieving universal secondary education and financing the expansion of education in Jamaica.

“And we will continue, as our budget allows us, to expand the sixth-form opportunit­ies right across the country, and as you turn out to be productive citizens and our economy grows, then we can increase our subsidy that we give to tertiary education so that more students can afford tertiary education,” he said.

Meanwhile, the prime minister, in commenting on two recently circulated videos of children being abused, described these as a “sad reflection of the society” and urged the students to be ambassador­s of peace and agents of productivi­ty.

“You are the inheritors of the new Jamaica, and you have to take a tough stance against violence in your school, in your peer groups, in your communitie­s [and] in your household … both in terms of how you respond and how you influence your friends and peers to respond. I encourage you to be agents of productivi­ty and ambassador­s of peace.

“Now if you put the two things together, you will have what we call prosperity. We will have a prosperous country, a country in which everyone can feel that their dreams, hopes, aspiration­s, and ambitions can be fulfilled,” Holness said.

He told the students that their dreams and aspiration­s can be fulfilled in Jamaica, pointing out that “nobody else from outside is going to come here and create that prosperous environmen­t for us”.

“We have to create that prosperous environmen­t for ourselves, and you are a very important part of that. Each and every one of you has that duty, that role to play in creating the prosperous Jamaica,” Holness said.

 ?? IAN ALLEN ?? Holness
IAN ALLEN Holness

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica