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SAJ regrets death of Noel Hylton

Published:Monday | February 26, 2018 | 12:00 AM
President of the Shipping Association of Jamaica Harry Maragh (right) presents Noel Hylton with his Lifetime Achievement Award at the Shipping Industry Awards Dinner and Cabaret Show, held at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel, Knutsford Boulevard, New Kingston on Tuesday, September 27, 2005.
Noel Hylton
Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller (second left); along with former prime ministers, Edward Seaga (left); P.J. Patterson (second right); and Bruce Golding (right); share a moment with retiring chairman, president and chief executive officer of the Port Authority of Jamaica (PAJ), Noel Hylton (third right) and his wife, Pat during a dinner hosted in his honour at the Terra Nova Hotel in Kingston on Thursday, October 31, 2013.
From left: Minister of Labour and Social Security Pearnel Charles is engaged in conversation with president of the Shipping Association of Jamaica (SAJ) Harriat Maragh; former general manger of the SAJ, Alvin Henry and chairman and chief executive officer of the Port Authority of Jamaica, Noel Hylton on the occasion of the Shipping Industry Lifetime Achievement Award banquet. The award was presented to Hylton by SAJ President Harry Maragh.
Watch your step! Entertainer Karen Smith leads Noel Hylton to the stage as she serenades him at The Shipping Industry Awards Dinner and Cabaret Show, held at the Jamaica Pegasus Hotel, New Kingston on Tuesday, September 27, 2005.
Ludlow Stewart (left), past president of the Shipping Association of Jamaica addressing the JIC, while Noel Hylton, chairman and chief executive officer of the Port Authority of Jamaics pays keen attention to the proceedings.
Chairman of the Port Authority of Jamaica Noel Hylton signs a contract at the Signing Ceremony for the new cruise ship pier in Falmouth between the Port Authority of Jamaica and The Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines at the Hilton Hotel on November 7, 2008.
Hylton
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The Shipping Association of Jamaica (SAJ) regrets the passing of its former general manager, Noel Hylton, OJ. Hylton joined the SAJ in 1966 at the height of one of the most momentous periods in the history of Jamaica's maritime sector and remained in charge of the operations of the association until 1975, when he was seconded to the government to establish the Port Authority of Jamaica (PAJ). He led the implementation of one of the first major transhipment hubs in the Caribbean in the Kingston Container Terminal. He received the SAJ's Lifetime Achievement award in 2005.

During his tenure at the PAJ, Hylton continued to work closely with the SAJ, and was supportive of the association's modernising role in industrial relations on the port of Kingston, which has led to one of the most stable and advanced shipping sectors in the hemisphere. Hylton also helped the port to achieve rapid expansion, and the development that is now underway is a continuation of the work that began during his tenure and is in large part due to the foundation that he lay.

President of the Shipping Association, Denise Lyn Fatt, hailed Hylton as a man who will be remembered for the unmistakable mark that he has made on the Port of Kingston.

Honorary managing committee member and past-president of the SAJ, Charles Johnston, who worked closely with Hylton since 1966, remarked that "there have been great changes between 1966 and the present, and while many have contributed, I think it is fair to say that Tony (Noel) Hylton has been at the centre of every change and development in this industry. He (was) a man of vision, a man of action, a giant of our industry."

Kim Clarke, the immediate past president of the SAJ and someone who worked very closely with Hylton over the years, remembers him as an unparalleled industry stalwart whose impact will live on. "I will personally miss his immense insight and wit," said Clarke.

Group CEO of the Shipping Association Trevor Riley said that the shipping industry in Jamaica has benefited from the great contributions of Hylton. "He has a well-deserved place in the history of the shipping industry, and has laid the foundation for the great logistics-centred economy which we are becoming. May he rest in peace."

Paul Scott, a former president of the SAJ who recruited Hylton to work at the shipping association in 1966, recalled that "Tony (Hylton) joined the SAJ during my involvement with this wonderful organisation where I got to know him well ... he was instrumental in improving its efficiency and operations, and the capability of its management team." Scott added: "He contributed much to the growth and development of our ports and shipping industry."

Former General Manager Alvin Henry recalled working with Hylton as an important participant in the Muirhead Commission of 1997 and the Joint Industrial council for the Port of Kingston. "The fact that we became the successful transhipment port and cruise-shipping destination marked by a stable industrial relations climate is owed largely to the work of a dedicated band of professionals, among whom Noel Hylton stood as a strong partner."