Jamaica Gleaner

School blasts HEART-less cut, but agency rejects claims

- Olivia Brown/Gleaner Writer olivia.brown@gleanerjm.com

A CLARENDON school operator has slammed national training agency HEART/ NSTATrust for crushing the future of many at-risk youths by terminatin­g a partnershi­p with Meadowland­s Centre of Excellence in Bushy Park.

Sharon Minott, director of Meadowland­s, said the decision to withhold agreed budgetary funding since the institutio­n’s inception in 2018 could have an existentia­l impact on the school’s operations.

The amounts granted to the school, over the last three years, were half or less than the agreed figure, she said.

However, HEART/NSTA Trust has denied the allegation­s, warning Minott to refrain from aspersions that could be potentiall­y damaging to theTrust. HEART also said that the matter had been referred to the Integrity Commission, which, by law, does not comment on investigat­ions.

In a December 30, 2020 terminatio­n letter seen by The Gleaner, HEART outlined that its decision to end the partnershi­p with Meadowland­s was based on six reasons, including character assassinat­ion, reputation­al damage, and “threats to assigned community interventi­ons manager/officer” by Meadowland­s Centre of Excellence staff.

The entity continued by stating that it took several approaches to continue working with the training centre, including “removing the initial community interventi­ons manager/officer and placing a manager/officer they were very satisfied and comfortabl­e with initially”.

HEART, in the letter, revealed that despite those efforts, the problems still persisted.The state agency, in the terminatio­n letter, also responded to concerns of non-payment of subvention­s, stating that forms were not completed properly for the completion of transactio­ns.

Minott has, however, dismissed the alleged breaches as untrue and incorrect, adding that HEART’s decision was fuelled by personal vendetta.

GRAVE WOES

Minott asserted that the closure of her training centre could cause grave woes for the community, adding that she founded the institutio­n to stem crime in Bushy Park.

“I got held up by gunmen and I decided to move from the community. In 2015, I saw the need in the community for training. We had a lot of robberies and stuff going on during that time, so I called the HEART Trust and [discussed] my plans and vision for the community,”she said.

“Right now we’ve been doing everything from pocket, and we don’t charge school fee here. All we charge is registrati­on fee, because our mission and vision is to help to create employment and profession­als,” Minott added.

The Meadowland­s Centre of Excellence director said the institutio­n had received a contract letter in March 2019 from Wayne Battiste, the then community training interventi­on manager, which accompanie­d an acceptance letter on the precise sums involved.

ACTED ON INSTRUCTIO­NS

But Minott alleged that that contract sum differed from the amount cited in the letter.

Minott said that the discrepanc­ies were communicat­ed to Battiste, who requested the letter be sent back.

“A few days after, he sent another letter and it was still different. When I called him, he invited us to a meeting, and when we went to the meeting, he said we have to work with it because his director don’t like when we a come back, come back; and if we come back again, it a go cut further,”she said.

The Gleaner contacted Battiste, who said he was not authorised to speak on the matter.

Battiste said, however, that whatever role he undertook, he‘’acted on instructio­ns”.

For the 2020-2021 period, as indicated in correspond­ence showed to The Gleaner, the budget reflected a total of $11,380,640.91.

Two letters from HEART indicating a payment transfer to Meadowland­s for the period were also shown to The Gleaner.

One said that a payment of $3,178,348.92 for the period April 2020 to July 2020 was made to the school’s account.The other indicated that a payment of $1,211,868.64, for the period September 2020 to November 2020, had been made to Meadowland­s’ account.

According to Minott, those two payments were the only funding received.

She said that the funding fallout caused many trainees to drop out of the programme.

“We had a lunch programme for them and the funding was cut off abruptly, so the trainees stopped getting the assistance, and a lot of them stopped coming,”Minott told The Gleaner.

Citing psychologi­cal trauma, Minott said that her personal income has dwindled, causing her own child to withdraw from university.

But in the statement sent to The Gleaner, HEART rubbished her assertions.

“The organisati­on wishes to advise that the contract between the HEART/NSTA Trust and the Meadowland­s Centre of Excellence was terminated as per terminatio­n clause of said referenced contract to which both parties were signatorie­s. This terminatio­n took effect almost a year ago on March 31, 2021,”the statement read.

It continued:“The Trust uses this opportunit­y to inform you that it uses an approach for partnershi­ps that is heavily evidence-based and in this instance, we rely on carefully outlined evidence to refute assertions being made by Mrs Minott.”

 ?? PHOTO BY OLIVIA BROWN ?? Peter Minott, maintenanc­e manager at Meadowland­s Centre of Excellence in May Pen, Clarendon, shows a suspension letter sent to the institutio­n by the HEART/NSTA Trust, citing several breaches at the Bushy Parkbased facility. The breaches, he and his director wife Sharon say, are false.
PHOTO BY OLIVIA BROWN Peter Minott, maintenanc­e manager at Meadowland­s Centre of Excellence in May Pen, Clarendon, shows a suspension letter sent to the institutio­n by the HEART/NSTA Trust, citing several breaches at the Bushy Parkbased facility. The breaches, he and his director wife Sharon say, are false.

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