More money for LIAT
Air transportATION in the region and more directly
to St. Vincent and the Grenadines hovers in pockets of uncertainty, and how the turbulence improves seems likely to take further rounds of negotiations, compromises and tolerance.
By December this year, talks on a possible ânexusâ between Liat and BWIA should advance and bring airline access to a degree of acceptability. {{more}}
When the House of Assembly meets here August 3, Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves will report on the progress of Liat. This situation with the air carrier has occupied a great deal of the regionâs attention, especially in recent times.
Air transport has soared to the height of serious concern over the years. And there seems no end in sight to the buoyant affair.
In the House of Assembly, listeners can expect to hear another of Dr. Gonsalvesâ furores on Liatâs survival.
For Dr. Gonsalves, keeping Liat in the sky is a âstrategic issueâ. With the implementation of the Caricom Single Market and Economy, the Vincentian Prime Minister says there cannot be a CSME âwithout reliable intra-island transport owned or influenced by the regionâ.
He emphasised that St. Vincent and the Grenadines needed Liat, and that the nation could not be âexposed to any other airlineâ.
Dr. Gonsalves pointed out that cash infusions to Liat were short term and were not enough to restructure the airline.
He cited additional problems of rising fuel costs, fallen fares, predatory pricing and mimicking of schedules as contributing to Liatâs woes. Dr. Gonsalves noted that some of Liatâs staff had been unproductive, and that even though the airline operated efficiently, âIt would at best be a marginal financial proposition.â
Liat received an injection of $22 million following a meeting in Barbados last week Friday. That session was attended by four of the regionâs prime ministers: Trinidad and Tobagoâs Patrick Manning, Antigua and Barbudaâs Baldwin Spencer, host Owen Arthur, and Vincentian Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves. SVGâs contribution was $5.7 million, secured from a loan at zero per cent interest from Trinidad and Tobago. Another $23 million is forthcoming, including private sector investment, and according to Dr. Gonsalves another meeting planned for October 8 will give the update on the progress of Liatâs revival.
For the Vincentian Prime Minister, it is cheaper to keep Liat flying than to close it. And for him, liquidation is not an option, neither is sitting back and doing nothing.
Finding money to compensate workers as a result of Liatâs closure would have been one of the biggest challenges facing the airline.
Dr. Gonsalves linked the question of air access with Liatâs survival. And for him, the construction of a jet port at Canouan is coming as a major boost in air traffic flow in the region. That will form a stop gap measure while plans for the construction of a jet port on mainland St. Vincent is taking positive direction. Dr. Gonsalves disclosed that his administration was the âfirst government to address an airport on mainland St.Vincent in a scientific wayâ.
He mentioned that further development at Kitchen and Argyle was halted as plans for airport construction continued to be explored.
Dr. Gonsalves expressed satisfaction that âWe are on stream for construction of a jet port on mainland St. Vincent.â He was hesitant to reveal details on the progress of the airport construction but mentioned that it would take six years before it will be ready.