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Cash-strapped CIMA needs senior staff
Chris Hamblin
Clearview Publishing
26 June 2014
Patrick Bodden, the
deputy managing director of the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority,
which allegedly has trouble getting its annual reminders out on time,
has admitted that his organisation is understaffed. He was answering
a parliamentary question about staffing from McKeeva Bush, a
politician who was reportedly charged in March last year with two
counts of misconduct in a public office, four counts of breach of
trust by a member of the Legislative Assembly under s13
Anti-Corruption Law 2008) and five counts of theft under s241
Penal Code 2007 Revision to do with a governmental credit card
and the import of explosive substances. Reports suggest that he has
been on bail ever since. The Cayman Compass
quoted Bodden as saying that “certainly we are at no way to the
level that is needed for the regulation of the financial industry in
a very robust way.” He went on to say that the authority employs
173 staff, including 152 Caymanians, and has 25 as-yet unfilled
vacancies, between 5 and 7 of which are senior. The exchange took
place at a meeting of a parliamentary committee. The Cayman Compass
was perhaps lucky to be able to hear it; in the neighbouring Turks &
Caicos Islands, the House of Assembly has denied private media the
privilege of recording any future proceedings. The Government is
planning to drop the budget for CIMA this year from $6.3 million to
$3.3 million, because of revenues that it expects from the Director
Registration and Licensing Law (2014) which came into effect on 4
June, and which gives directors of Cayman “covered entities” 3
months from that date to register or licence, unless they are
corporate entities in which case they have six 6. Other reports
suggest that CIMA’s real problem is monetary and it is waiting for
the extra income before it can recruit the necessary staff.