FREEPORT, GRAND BAHAMA — Minister of State for Grand Bahama, Senator Kwasi Thompson said the reopening of the Bahamian Brewery Company’s production facility is an example of what it means to go through hard and difficult times and come back out bigger and better.
Thompson participated in a private tour of the renovated facility yesterday, alongside brewery president James Sands and Ian Rolle, president of the Grand Bahama Port Authority.
The company is expected to restart the production of their line of products on Monday, September 28.
“We want to congratulate the Sands family, because they have done an excellent job in rebuilding this business,” said Thompson.
“This really is an example of a Bahamian-owned business, with roots in Grand Bahama, having gone through Hurricane Dorian and having gone through the Covid-19 Pandemic lockdowns and coming back successfully.
“It sends a very positive message to the entire island that one can go through difficult times, but you can also come back and come back better. Not only has this place been rebuilt, but it has been expanded.”
Thompson noted that one of the commendable things Sands and the company did following the destruction of the business by Hurricane Dorian, was to keep all of the staff members employed.
At present, some 85 percent of the employees are back on the job, with the others furloughed. However, as the production line kicks into gear on Monday, more members of staff are expected to be re-employed.
“That says a lot about this company and about the people who own Bahamian Brewery,” said Thompson.
“Keeping all of the employees on during the time the company was shut down was important for the employment numbers on Grand Bahama. That was a huge investment and it is noteworthy. It really is just a good message. It sends the right message to Grand Bahama and to the rest of the country that businesses can go through a storm like Dorian and still come back.”
Bahamian Brewery was adversely affected by Hurricane Dorian that struck Grand Bahama with Category Five winds in September of 2019, destroying much of the building and flooding the production building with over five feet of salt water. It took some months for the employees to clean up the facility and have the building repaired.
With an added investment for repairs and renovation, Bahamian Brewery in Freeport, Grand Bahama, is now a bigger facility, with the capability of increasing its production.
Thompson called the success story and the reopening of the company’s production facility “another good day in Grand Bahama”.