Secretary of Tourism, Culture, Antiquities & Transportation in the Tobago House of Assembly (THA), Tashia Burris must be credited with the cop-out of the year as she sought to justify why the THA is partnering with Grenada instead of Trinidad for next week's Carnival.
Burris told a news conference Monday that "the reality is before we were joined to Trinidad we were joined to Grenada."
As irrelevant as the reference was, Burris is correct from a historic standpoint.
Long before the island became a ward of Trinidad in 1898, Tobago was part of the Windward Islands and therefore was closer to Grenada than it was to Trinidad.
But who exactly is Burris attempting to fool into thinking that the THA's Carnival decision had anything to do with history?
What can she tell us of Grenada's Carnival product that is more valuable than the work that goes into months of celebrations across Trinidad culminating in two days of parading in Port-of-Spain and San Fernando?
Burris' cop-out is a poor attempt to hide the fact that the Progressive Democratic Patriots which now controls the THA, harbours longstanding misconceptions that to partner with local authorities is to partner with the Government.
It seems also to be encouraging a kind of divisive thinking echoed by many Tobagonians, that Trinis are instrinsically invasive to their way of doing things and therefore should be rejected when possible.
Both arguments are terribly flawed and when applied to this month's Carnival, vexatious.
To seek the support of local bodies involved in Carnival such as the Trinbago Unified Calypsonians Organisation or the National Carnival Commission, is not to seek the support of a PNM Government.
The expertise that resides in these bodies transcends all administrations and has for years been the engine rooms of a Carnival product often deemed 'The Greatest Show on Earth'.
The PDP-run THA, therefore, must not encourage the myopic thinking that anything to do with Trinidad is intrinsically linked to those that govern the country.
On the other hand, the brunt of Carnival celebrations is tied to the expertise of private companies and personnel such as Tribe, Legacy, Ceasar's Army and individual soca artistes, all far superior to anything Grenada offers.
In seeking to ensure that the Tobago's creative industry was not disadvantaged by Trinidadian companies mass-producing costumes, the THA wisely determined that all Trinidadian producers must partner with Tobagonians to be allowed to participate there.
We couldn't agree more with the THA in this stance.
In fact, it should have adopted this exact approach with the overall administration of the Carnival, that is, limiting the amount of partnership it wanted with Trinidad, rather than seeking to dismiss the bigger island and aligning the $17.5 million event with Grenada entirely.
The fact that Caribbean Airlines has opened up 19,000 additional seats to Tobago for the festival, speaks to a bigger demand from Trinidadians wanting to travel there.
The fetes, limes and other events will have a significantly high Trinidadian presence as seen in other occasions like the Great Fete Weekend.
This, we know, will be a major boost to the economy, bringing revenue to vendors, hoteliers, taxi drivers, car rental companies and bars.
We can only hope that Burris recognises this and that when she sings the praises of the Carnival's success at the next THA plenary sitting, she would admit how important the roles of those from Trinidad were and how little Grenada truly contributed.