 
          Business View Caribbean
        
        
          
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          The houses were deliberately built in a way that al-
        
        
          lowed homeowners to make additions or to add their
        
        
          own personal tastes onto the basic units provided.
        
        
          Intended mainly for middle and low-income workers,
        
        
          the schemes allowed many people who would other-
        
        
          wise not be able to afford a home, the opportunity to
        
        
          work and pay for their own land over time. With a small
        
        
          down payment, a family could acquire a unit, and as it
        
        
          saved and earned more money, could build or expand
        
        
          the house to suit its needs. That aspect of Portmore’s
        
        
          development has remained consistent through the
        
        
          years, and today one of the most distinctive features
        
        
          of Portmore is the uniqueness of each house, each
        
        
          street, and each neighborhood.
        
        
          Over the years, the citizens lobbied the Government
        
        
          for their own Municipality and in 2001 the City Council
        
        
          was formed to create a model for Portmore. In 2003,
        
        
          Portmore was granted Municipal status and became a
        
        
          Municipality, unto itself. Today, it is the only Municipali-
        
        
          ty with a directly-elected Mayor in the English-speaking
        
        
          Caribbean.
        
        
          Over the last decade, Portmore has grown from eight
        
        
          municipal council divisions to twelve, and according to
        
        
          its current Acting Mayor, Leon Thomas, it is still look-
        
        
          ing to grow larger. “We have the land mass for any
        
        
          major development that anyone would want to do in
        
        
          Portmore,” he explains.  “So, we are inviting people to
        
        
          come on down and look to Portmore for investment.”
        
        
          In its desire to attract new businesses, especially light
        
        
          manufacturing, the Municipality advertises its friendly
        
        
          zoning and speedy approval procedures.
        
        
          Plans for future development include: the expansion
        
        
          of port facilities; the construction of a world-class pri-
        
        
          vate medical hospital, which will cater to both local and
        
        
          foreign clients; a major bus hub that will occupy over
        
        
          twelve acres; new Information Technology (IT) plants
        
        
          in the Naggo Head area of the Municipality that will
        
        
          provide hundreds of jobs; and additional housing de-
        
        
          velopments to come on stream. According to Thomas,