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Water Project Joins Knowledge sharing forum to exchange ideas on Water sustainability in Jamaica

On Wednesday, April 17, the Water Project Jamaica joined key stakeholders in the Water sector at a Knowledge sharing forum hosted by Red Stripe at the Knutsford Court Hotel in Kingston. The event was hosted to heighten awareness around the importance of water in the productive sector and to emphasize the need for an integrated approach to water sustainability across industries.

Jacqueline Cameron, Project Manager for the JN Foundation implemented Water project Jamaica found the event to be quite useful for charting Water policy changes in Jamaica.

“The event was important in the sense that it captured the opinions of policy makers, leaders and organizations that have influence in the water sector to make policy changes for the country’s water sector”  She said.

“I definately believe that there are opportunities to follow up with Red Stripe in terms of getting the action points from the Knowledge sharing forum  and the many discussions and presentations. I’d also recommend that all organizations that took part in the forum be brought on board to be a part of the proposed  Management team responsible for working towards integrated Water approaches.” she added.

Throughout the day, presentations focused on the importance of every drop of water,  Jamaica and Water Resources Management, Sustaining sustainable access for Industry, good practices and lessons learnt.

Speakers included: Sen. The Hon. Pearnel Charles Jr, Minister without portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation; Evan Cayetano, Senior Water and Sanitation Expert, Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and Vernon Barnett, Vice president, Investment and Performance Monitoring for the National Water Commission among others.

The Water Project Jamaica,  is a four-year project designed to address water management issues in the urban housing sector,  primarily related to climate change. The project is a collaboration between the JN Foundation, JN Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, the Climate Investment Funds and the Pilot Programme for Climate Resilience.

Shanoy Coombs| Communications Officer of The Water Project

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Labour Day activities focusing on children’s safety — ministry

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Children’s safety is the focus of activities being organised by the Government to commemorate Labour Day this year, on Thursday, May 23.

Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainment and Sport, Olivia Grange, says special emphasis is being placed on instituting safeguards for children on the roads and at schools.

“It is timely, and I think we should also address… the safety of our children from predators. We cannot overlook [this] in our planning and discussions, [as to] how we will address it in a public way,” she said.

The minister was addressing members of the National Labour Day Planning Committee, during a meeting at Jamaica House on Thursday.

Grange, who chairs the committee, outlined the rationale for this year’s focus.

“We thought that the elevation of road safety onto this national community-based platform will deepen the impact of the existing public-private road safety campaign led by the National Road Safety Council; Ministry of Transport and Mining; Ministry of Education, Youth and Information; JN foundation; and UNICEF Jamaica, among others,” she said.

The minister emphasised that Workers’ Week and Labour Day “occur at a critical period for our nation’s children and vulnerable road users, as they take place during Child Month and just before Road Safety Month”.

Over the past several weeks, Committee members have been meeting to discuss activities for Labour Day, which culminates Workers’ Week beginning Sunday, May 19.

Among the other slated activities is a national thanksgiving church service, and concert. The events will be formally unveiled during a ceremony to be announced, the ministry said.

 

See the original article here!

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Rose Miller, grants manager at the JN Foundation

Stoking the Entrepreneurship Spirit in Millennials

The United States based publication, Atlantic Magazine, asserts that millennials are the “best-educated generation in American history,” with more than a third holding a bachelor’s degree or higher.
Nevertheless, they may become the first generation of Americans to be worse off than their parents, with lower incomes, more debt, and higher poverty rates.
To succeed, millennials will need some major preparation, especially considering that the world around them is changing constantly, the magazine posited.
While there is no local data about millennials in Jamaica to make that assumption, the general view is that persons in this age group have grown up with technology, and this has not only made life easier for them in many respects, but has also created numerous opportunities for generating wealth.
However, some millennials, such as final year student at the University of Technology, Jamaica (Utech), Jermaine Kelly, is making use of these opportunities, by defining his own destiny and carving out a niche for himself, so that he can have a secure future.
Kelly has established a taxi service, which he hopes to expand into a fleet; and, if he has his way, to branch out into trucking within the next five years. His entrepreneurship spirit however started a few years before, at age 17 when he had a “sweetie business,” while he attended high school.

“From a younger age, I was worried that I had to rely on other persons to get money. I didn’t like that, and I wanted to be independent; therefore, I decided to research opportunities from which I could benefit financially,” he related.

“I thought about selling sweets, however, I didn’t want to be walking around selling sweets at the expense of my education; hence, I engaged the vendors at my school, and asked them if they would sell the sweets for me,” he explained.
Kelly said the vendors were kind enough to assist him, and, he was able to earn a profit of $1,500 every week. He benefitted from those funds for about two years, as he was able to meet his personal financial needs and saved a good portion of that income.

The success of that business became an ember which sparked other desires for him to establish a formal business.

The Bachelors of Education student, who is majoring in electrical engineering, said that after entering university, in his second year, he went on the student work and travel summer programme in the United States of America (USA); and, he was able to accumulate enough money to cover his next year’s tuition and saved some of it.

“I saved US$2,000 in my bank account for a future business. At the time, I didn’t know what I wanted to do, because the market was changing a lot. The next year, I went back to the USA programme and was able to save US$3,000. The following year, I returned to the programme, and I doubled my savings. Over the three-year period, I was able to accumulate approximately US$11,000,” he disclosed.

He began to do his own research and investigation to determine what kind of business he could get into with the nest egg that he had accumulated.

“I said to myself, I’m in my final year of school and can’t finish school without a plan. Therefore, it was weighing on my mind. Then it occurred to me that perhaps I could go into the taxi business, because I realized that there was demand for transportation services,” he said.

He imported a car, and since then, he has been able to licence and insure the vehicle with the assistance of his girlfriend, Bobbie-Ann Campbell and is in the process of getting a driver for the vehicle.

Kelly, who is a member of the JN Group, said that his entrepreneurial spirit was nurtured by the book, The Richest Man in Babylon, a 1926 classics by George S. Clason, which dispenses financial advice through a collection of parables set 8,000 years ago in ancient Babylon. The book is still in print, almost a century after the parables were originally published and is regarded as a classic of personal financial advice.

He was also influenced by his uncle, who is a farmer in St. Catherine, where he witnessed the progression of his growth in the business and over time was able to accumulate wealth and improve his dwelling.

His father, Dave Kelly, said he has always encouraged his son whenever Jermaine discusses his business ideas with him. “I assist him in thinking them through and this allowed him to become more confident in moving forward.”
Rose Miller, grants manager at the JN Foundation, commended Kelly for his drive, vision, discipline and initiative; and said these are important traits not just for success in business but for life.

“We are in a period in time where opportunities abound. Young people should be encouraged to think outside of the box and utilize different mediums to nurture their entrepreneurial drive,” she said. “They should be ready to take advantage of these opportunities to create employment for themselves and others,” she affirmed.

Mrs Miller cautioned, however, that if millennials are to achieve financial stability and ultimately, financial independence, they must utilize the tried and tested financial tools.

She advised that “it is important to create and stick to a budget; always ensure that credit is used primarily for wealth creation; save and invest consistently and incorporate insurance in your plans as a means to create, preserve and eventually transfer wealth. Finally, believe it or not, giving back is also a part of the formula for financial success.”

“Step out boldly, be confident, the information required to make wise choices are readily available, seek and pursue knowledge and achieve your life goals,” Miller advised.

 

 Dionne Rose l JN Corporate Communications

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roadsafety

Students Advocate for Safe School Zones

Corporate Area high school students are lobbying for safe school zones, which they say would involve expanding the number of pedestrian crossings and increasing police presence/patrols in these zones.
The students made the recommendations during a recent meeting with JN Foundation and a UNICEF Delegation, to discuss the collaborative efforts of the Road Safety Programme and the Students’ Safety on the Streets (SSOS) Initiative to support and activities  that seek to mitigate the dangers students face while traversing to and from school, within the Downtown Kingston area.
“We need to have areas, such as: clusters of schools around Kingston Central and other clusters of schools declared “safe zones.” There needs to be a policy and legislation,” said Chad Rattray, head boy of Kingston College and chair of the Students’ Safety on the Streets Initiative, as he pointed out that other countries have implemented similar policies to protect their children.
The students also revealed that they were concerned about their safety while walking to and from school.
“The possibilities of either being robbed or harassed are high. Therefore, I would take the taxis, however, there is still some level of fear, because some of the taxis are robot taxis,” Donjah Pommells, secretary of the SSOS and head girl of Convent of Mercy Academy, Alpha Girls’ School, related.
They called for a school bus system to be put in place, to transport students during peak hours and after school.
The students were commended by Onyka Barrett Scott, general manager of the JN Foundation, for their proactiveness.
Mrs Barrett Scott pointed to data from a “Cost of Care Report,” produced by the Violence Prevention Alliance, in collaboration with the JN Foundation, which revealed that it could cost the Government of Jamaica some J$9 million to treat a person who has been hospitalized with injuries from a motor vehicle accident.
“This also makes the case why initiatives such as yours are important, because it is a lot cheaper to implement these initiatives and to get people to change their behavior and practices,” she said.
Dr. Rebecca Tortello, Education Specialist at UNICEF commended the students “on their decision to focus on issues related to their safe journey to and from school as all children have a right to an education free from fear.”
The SSOS Initiative is a student-led cause, which advocates for students who feel unsafe and have been victims of crimes, such as: sexual harassment and robberies while on their way to and from school.
In observation of Peace Month, the SSOS organised a Peace March in the Kingston Central Area communities, on March 22. The event focused on taking a stance against violence towards students.
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Contact:  Dionne Rose l JN Corporate Communications

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