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Carnival Cruise Lines announces competition to name Artisan Village at new Celebration Key destination

CARNIVAL Cruise Lines, with support from the Ministry for Grand Bahama and the Ministry of Youth, Sports and Culture, is announcing a local community competition to name the Artisan Village at the new Celebration Key cruise destination.

The contest, open to all Grand Bahamians, will close March 25, 2024, after which a selection committee, including local officials and representatives of the cultural and creative industries, will recommend a slate of finalists with the winning entry to be announced in early April.

The prize package will consist of: B$5,000 cash; attendance at the ribbon cutting ceremony for the Artisan Village, including transportation, food and beverage; and a day-pass to Celebration Key,

along with drink vouchers, food and a cabana for the winner to enjoy.

The Artisan Village will be a cultural space where local artisans and creatives can showcase their talents and share their artistic expressions and authentic cultural products with visitors from around the world. It is a central feature of the now $600m Celebration Key flagship project, the largest of its kind ever undertaken by Carnival Corporation.

“We are extremely excited about this competition,” said Carnival Corporation and PLC’s public affairs and community engagement director Philcher Grant-Adderley. “Carnival has sought to prioritise authentic Bahamian culture throughout every aspect of this project, from the food to the

architecture, and nowhere more than in the Artisan Village, which we envision as a cornerstone of the entire destination.

Entries can be submitted by individuals, families, groups, local organisations, classrooms, etc. Individuals under 18 can take part, but must also submit a Release Form completed by a parent or legal guardian.

Submit your entries online at: www.celebrationkeygrandbahama.com.

Each entry should include a 200-300-word summary explaining the name and how it relates to Celebration Key and, more importantly, Bahamian culture. Participants may present more than one idea, but each concept must be submitted separately.

The names submitted should

not include the names of existing businesses, corporations, brands, political figures, names of specific people, things and places. Participants must be following the Celebration Key’s Facebook and Instagram accounts in order to be eligible to win the Contest.

With the recently announced additional $100m pier extension investment, the now $600m flagship project remains the largest of its kind ever undertaken by Carnival Corporation. The initial phase of the project, including the original two cruise ship berths, is projected to help generate over 700 permanent jobs in the community – including approximately 300 Bahamians hired directly by Carnival Corporation to help welcome 2.2 million guests each year to Grand Bahama starting in 2025.

Comments

John 1 month, 3 weeks ago

Do you know what happens when a government taxes it’s own people increasingly and mercilessly but foreigners and foreign enterprises operate in that country paying minimal taxes under the premise of ‘ contributing to the local economy?’ Well the local economy eventually shrinks and dries up and what is left is taken over by foreigners. Increasing taxes on Bahamian generated revenue does not expand the economy. It may increase government revenue in the short term and midterm but it will eventually kill out the economy. And whilst government, in its economic ignorance’ and blind sightedness continues to allow cruise ships to penetrate more and more into The Bahamian tourist economy and displace more and more Bahamians and garnish even less and less taxes per tourists dollar, it better prepare for the inevitable. A self implosion of the Bahamian economy ( government expenditure vastly exceeding revenue) AND an uprising of the Bahamian people. How do you even now want to exclude Bahamian taxi drivers, jet ski operators and even hair braiders from the mix of a multi/billion dollar industry? Do you know if there was no BaHAMAS and no Jamaica an d rest of the Caribbean, the cruise ship industry would collapse overnight? Y’all better stop jokin and fix this

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