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 Vol. 31, Issue 45  BROOKLYN EDITION November 6-12, 2020 
 REFINERY  
 OFFER  
 UNSURE 
 Scramble to revive major  
 CARICOM, T&T refinery 
 By Bert Wilkinson 
 Trinidadian authorities had  
 put the Petrotrin refinery up  
 for sale to private buyers. A  
 group calling itself the Patriotic  
 Energies  and  Technologies  
 Company Ltd comprising  
 former oilfield workers, union  
 leaders and foreign investors  
 was picked as the preferred bidder, 
  earning the right to revive  
 the lifeline refinery but all indications  
 are that its bid is struggling. 
 Earlier  this  week,  cabinet  
 threw a spanner in the plans  
 and works of Patriotic’s bid to  
 take over, resuscitate the closed  
 plant and reemploy thousands  
 of  breadline  workers,  saying  
 the bid lacked proper details  
 regarding environmental compliances, 
  statutory approvals,  
 purchase  price  and  taxation  
 requirements.  It  was  therefore  
 moving  to  explore  other  
 options,  meaning  second  and  
 third placed bidders. 
 But  an  appeal  from  the  
 union for a review has found  
 favor  with  Prime  Minister  
 Keith  Rowley  as  he  expressly  
 appointed a review committee  
 and gave Patriotic time to get  
 its act together. 
 The committee reexamining  
 the bid has until month end to  
 submit its report even as concerns  
 are growing about time  
 wasting and the steady deterioration  
 of  plant  infrastructure  
 as the months roll by. 
 Until its closure in late 2018,  
 Petrotrin had supplied CARICOM  
 clients with up to 25,000  
 barrels  a  day  and  a  further  
 38,000 to buyers outside of the  
 region. 
 Like the sugar industry in  
 neighboring Guyana, the refinery  
 had been the linchpin of  
 economic  activity  and  life  in  
 large parts of South Trinidad.  
 Its closure was devastating to  
 workers,  small,  medium  and  
 large  scale  supporting  businesses  
 and led to major political  
 problems for the governing  
 PNM administration. 
 From  all  appearances,  the  
 PNM had given every assistance  
 and indication that it had  
 wanted  to  help  Patriotic  with  
 its strong oilfield union connections  
 especially  so  because  
 it also had strong local links  
 and inputs. 
 Minister of Energy, Franklin  
 Khan expressed regret at  
 A person holds a sign as people rally the day after the 2020 U.S. presidential election  
 while votes continue to be counted, outside the TCF Center in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.,  
 Nov. 4, 2020.   REUTERS / Shannon Stapleton 
 Let every vote count: Caribbean pols  
 By Nelson A. King 
 As the outcome of the US  
 Presidential Elections remains  
 on  a  cliffhanger,  as  of  Thursday  
 morning, with Democratic  
 Presidential nominee Joe Biden  
 narrowing the path to victory  
 over  incumbent  Republican  
 President Donald J. Trump,  
 Caribbean American legislators  
 in  New  York  have  joined  
 the Democratic Party in urging  
 that every vote in battleground  
 states be counted. 
 “We  worked  hard  to  
 keep  Brooklyn  blue  this  year,  
 and I am proud to congratulate  
 all our local Democratic  
 winners today,” said New York  
 State  Assemblywoman  Rodneyse  
 Bichotte, the daughter  
 of Haitian immigrants, who  
 heads the Brooklyn Democratic  
 Party, in a message to constituents  
 Wednesday  night,  
 alluding to the symbolic color  
 of  the  Democratic  Party.  “I  
 thank all our field operatives,  
 staff  and  poll  workers  who  
 make our democracy possible. 
 “In New York, it will take  
 a week or more for absentee  
 ballots  to  be  tabulated,  but  
 it is clear that our state and  
 our county are overwhelmingly  
 blue,” added Bichotte, who  
 represents the predominantly  
 Caribbean 42nd Assembly District  
 in Brooklyn. “We must  
 remain patient. 
 “Although the wait is stress- 
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