Foreign investors are presently in the process of buying more Jamaican properties. Chinese investors are building a large resort in the Bahamas and have investments now in Jamaica.They are investing in the port project on Goat island. There are,indeed, direct flights from Latin America and the Jamaican government is encouraging more. Spanish is being taught more now in Jamaican schools and many resort employees are taking Spanish courses. This helps them move into management positions with the foreign investors. Already charter flights are being flown from the former Soviet bloc countries to Jamaica. In fact, Russian language courses are being taught in Jamaica to help resort workers in dealing with the visitors. Ganja will soon be decriminalized in Jamaica and there is serious discussions about the development of a medical marijuana industry on the island. The facts of the foreign investment in Jamaica is common knowledge and so is the effect on Jamaican owned properties. No one can easily dismiss the impact of an open Cuba. I refer to the "traffic lights' in light of the recent modernization of Jamaica and the expectation of more modernization. Sorry if some can not follow the train of thought. In this context, I would hope that Negril could be spared as a sort of historical zone if you will with more stringent building codes etc than other parts of the island. Falmouth has been designated a historical site-United Nations, I believe. In Mexico, San Miguel de Allende has been preserved as a special city where no traffic lights are allowed for instance. As others have stated, the present codes in Negril should be emphasized, modified where necessary and enforced. There will indeed be development but if there is foresight, perhaps that development can be controlled to the benefit of all concerned and Negril as we hope to see it can be preserved. Wayward fantasies? And certainly not almost complete ignorance of the facts.