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Eslyn Henley Richiez Learning Centre to receive school bus

- thanks to partnership among Lions Club of Tortola, West Indian Association of Bermuda, Ministry of Education, Culture, Youth Affairs, Fisheries & Agriculture & Ministry of Health & Social Development.
A school bus for transporting students of Eslyn Henley Richiez Learning Centre to their homes and for field trips will be donated on Tuesday, February 9, 2021, at 8:30am. Photo: GIS/File
The Eslyn Henley Richiez Learning Centre (EHRLC), which currently occupies a space at Althea Scatliffe Primary School since its building was devastated by Hurricane Irma in September 2017. Photo: VINO/File
The Eslyn Henley Richiez Learning Centre (EHRLC), which currently occupies a space at Althea Scatliffe Primary School since its building was devastated by Hurricane Irma in September 2017. Photo: VINO/File
ROAD TOWN, Tortola, VI- The Eslyn Henley Richiez Learning Centre (EHRLC), which currently occupies a space at Althea Scatliffe Primary School since its building was devastated by Hurricane Irma in September 2017, will now have its own school bus.

The donation of the bus has been made possible thanks to a partnership among the Lions Club of Tortola, the West Indian Association of Bermuda, Ministry of Education, Culture, Youth Affairs, Fisheries and Agriculture and Ministry of Health and Social Development.

The bus will be presented to the institution for differently-abled persons on Tuesday, February 9, 2021, at 8:30am, according to a press release from the Lions Club of Tortola on February 6, 2021.

Public-Private partnership

“This is a great display of community volunteerism and public-private partnership at work for the continued recovery of the Virgin Islands,” the Lions Club of Tortola stated.

The club said it had reached out to the school in September 2019 to see how they could assist with its needs, which included computers, a TV and a school bus for transporting the students to their homes and for field trips.

In March 2020, the Club, along with corporate sponsors Infinite Solutions and Mourants donated four Ipads and a 65 inch Smart TV to the EHRLC. The Club also committed to further assist with getting a School Bus.

West Indian Association of Bermuda donated $20K towards bus purchase

It said in August 2019, the Club was approached by the West Indian Association of Bermuda who had raised $20,000 to assist the Virgin Islands following the devastating hurricanes of 2017.

“They agreed to partner with the Lions Club of Tortola to use the funds for a community project. The Club agreed to apply the funds towards the purchase of the School Bus for EHRLC. The funds were supplemented by donations of $9,000 and $5,000 from the Ministries of Education and Health, respectively.”

The donation of the bus comes as Government is making moves to rebuild the Eslyn Henley Richiez Learning Centre in the area where the Magistrate’s Court in John’s Hole is currently located.

The school was first established by the BVI Red Cross and opened its doors in 1972 as Fort Charlotte Children’s Centre at McNamara.

On March 13, 1998, Fort Charlotte Children’s Centre was officially renamed Eslyn Henley Richiez Learning Centre in honour of its first principal.

4 Responses to “Eslyn Henley Richiez Learning Centre to receive school bus”

  • musa (07/02/2021, 08:21) Like (12) Dislike (0) Reply
    Great news thanks to to team work.
  • joseph (07/02/2021, 09:11) Like (9) Dislike (0) Reply
    Oh! This is like a breath of fresh early morning air. After the stormy weather of drugs moving through our lands, the robberies, the hold-ups and now the killings this jester is particularly meaningful and uplifting. Kudos to all involved.
  • Advocate (08/02/2021, 12:08) Like (1) Dislike (0) Reply
    When will they get a new building? It is long overdue.
  • A few thoughts (08/02/2021, 12:35) Like (2) Dislike (0) Reply
    These children deserve so much more than the mere means they are given, they need more trained staff and a bigger facility that truly caters to their individual needs and a proper school building fully equipped and designed to keep them safe and secure. I pray for the day they can get some large funding to get the aforementioned done.

    Apart from these school aged youth, a proper mental health facility is needed to treat people of all ages, backgrounds and sizes. Mental health, or the lack thereof, is a serious problem in this territory and it seems like seeking treatment has a stigma. As an adult, as I interact with hundreds of different people on a daily basis ,even though many appear “normal”, when you speak to them and observe their mannerisms you can tell that they are a bit troubled. In this new decade we need to change that. Normalize mental health care.


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