2,000 entrepreneurs to benefit from ENDS
Minister without Portfolio in the Ministry of National Security, Senator Matthew Samuda, says that more than 2,000 entrepreneurs are benefiting under the pilot phase of the E-Commerce National Delivery System (ENDS).
The programme was first rolled out on March 26 in Portmore, St Catherine, and expanded to Montego Bay, St James, and Kingston and St Andrew on April 2.
The web-based ENDS system enables quick-service industry and delivery stakeholders registered on the platform to operate during the coronavirus (COVID-19) curfew hours until midnight, by facilitating online delivery orders only.
Speaking with journalists yesterday following a meeting with entrepreneurs in Montego Bay who have registered with ENDS, Samuda said the programme, which is still in the “test phase”, has been ensuring business continuity, noting that the success, so far, has been encouraging.
“We believe this (ENDS) is important. This is in line with what the Prime Minister has articulated time and time again… to balance lives and livelihoods as a Government, and to ensure that there is business continuity and that the recovery period after COVID-19 is no longer than it needs to be,” he said.
Samuda said that some 500 people in Montego Bay, including restaurateurs and pan chicken vendors, have so far registered for activities under ENDS and have expressed optimism about the initiative.
“Some of the pan chicken vendors who have registered with ENDS have been doing an excellent job and have been supplying orders right throughout the St James space. They have had hundreds of orders since… and we are very happy that they have been able to facilitate and continue business. It means a lot to them, it means a lot to their families and it means a lot to us,” he noted.
Samuda described ENDS as a “silver lining” that can revolutionise the service delivery sector.