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Governor’s farewell message – OPptimism, but a need to sharpen the public sector and retain an open economy

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Providenciales, TCI, October 6, 2016 – After three happy years in the beautiful country of Turks and Caicos Islands, Jill and I will be leaving with great sadness next week, on 10 October – and with great relief that the islands were, unlike others in the region, untouched by Hurricane Matthew.  It hardly seems possible that it was almost three years to the day that we were in the House of Assembly for a memorable swearing-in ceremony.

We both count ourselves privileged to have lived in Turks and Caicos. Everyone, from Ministers and opposition leaders to resort owners and taxi drivers, have welcomed us warmly wherever we have gone, from shopping in Provo to walking in Middle Caicos.

It is important to look forward not back, something which I intend to remind myself of as I begin to work outside the Foreign Office.  I am optimistic about TCI.   It’s economy is looking stronger than most in the region, and we have an international brand which is increasingly recognized from New York to London.

It is vital that TCI’s leaders and population preserve its wonderful environment.  There is plenty of space for development, and what has happened in South Caicos, for example, in the past three years with a completely new runway under construction and new resorts is an extraordinary example of TCI’s economic strength.

TCI’s success is based heavily on the fruits of private enterprise, and in the future, as one senior public servant said to me just last week, the civil service needs to continue to raise its game.  It’s good that motivation and training is being increasingly recognized, but there are still vulnerabilities, for example in delivery and customer service, where we need to get sharper.

Similarly it is my hope, and that of Ministers in London, that whoever leads the country after the next election will retain and strengthen the open and corruption free government TCI has developed, and a rigorous and resilient economy.  Our painstakingly achieved reputation, demonstrated by the fantastic achievement of a Triple  B plus rating from one of the world’s largest rating agencies over the last two years, can be dashed quickly. A return to the high spending extravagances of an earlier era could be disastrous.

img_0950Above all my optimism is based on seeing the younger generation of Turks and Caicos Islanders starting to make their mark on the country. The thousands of schoolchildren Jill and I have met across all the islands during the annual Footsteps4Good charity walk, and through the Cadets Corps, have an energy, enthusiasm and charm which could take TCI to a higher level. The country saw how one young man, Delano Williams, carried the baton, literally, at peak level in this year’s Olympics. He told me last month that he is determined, despite the setbacks, to continue to perform at world levels for the foreseeable future. I hope there may be a chance to see Delano compete again in London next year.

As I continue to travel and work in Britain and other countries, I know that there will be plenty of opportunities to sing Turks and Caicos’s praises, and I hope to return to see my optimism translate into a confident, successful and caring country, whether it’s people choose to remain part of the UK, or eventually opt for an independent future.

Thank you to everyone for letting Jill and me, and our daughters and grandchildren, share with you for three wonderful years a little piece of your country’s beauty, charm and purpose.

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Spirit Shutdown Raises New Questions for Grand Turk’s Long-Promised South Florida Link

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Turks and Caicos, May 2026 – The sudden collapse of Spirit Airlines has added a new layer of uncertainty to Grand Turk’s long-discussed push for direct commercial flights into the South Florida market.

Spirit Airlines announced early Saturday, May 2, that it had begun an “orderly wind-down” of operations, effective immediately, cancelling all flights and warning passengers not to go to the airport. The Dania Beach, Florida-based carrier said rising oil prices, pressure on the business and the failure to secure additional funding left it with no alternative but to shut down.

For the Turks and Caicos Islands, the shutdown lands uncomfortably close to a policy question that has lingered since late 2023: which airlines were being courted to restore direct international airlift into Grand Turk?

In December 2023, Magnetic Media reported that Premier Washington Misick told the House of Assembly that the Government was in negotiations with two South Florida airlines to secure commercial flights for the nation’s capital. The Premier said significant efforts were being made for the “reintroduction of international airlift into Grand Turk,” with a commitment to direct airlift into the South Florida market.

At the time, Government and the Turks and Caicos Islands Airports Authority were attempting to get two airlines to provide biweekly flights, Magnetic Media reported.

No airline was publicly named.

That is where Spirit’s collapse becomes locally significant. Spirit previously operated in the Turks and Caicos market, but its Fort Lauderdale to Providenciales route was never returned to the roster following the break precipitated by the Coronavirus pandemic. Islanders had hoped that Spirit, with its South Florida base, low-cost model and historic connection to the destination, may have been among the airlines Government was exploring for a Grand Turk revival.

There is still no public confirmation that Spirit was one of the two airlines in those talks. But if it was, Grand Turk has now lost one of the most obvious candidates.

Spirit’s own statement said the carrier had reached an agreement with bondholders in March 2026 on a restructuring plan that could have allowed it to continue, but that a sudden and sustained rise in fuel prices ultimately left the company unable to secure the hundreds of millions of dollars in liquidity needed to survive. Chief Executive Officer Dave Davis called the outcome “tremendously disappointing.”

The shutdown stunned the aviation industry and threw thousands of travellers and roughly 17,000 employees into crisis. ABC News reported that Spirit’s final flight landed shortly after midnight Saturday, while the airline had been scheduled to operate 277 flights that day, all of them cancelled.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said the federal government had activated airline partners to help passengers avoid being stranded, keep route access open and prevent fares from skyrocketing. United, Delta, JetBlue and Southwest agreed to cap ticket prices for affected Spirit customers, while American, Delta, Allegiant and Frontier announced reduced or frozen fares on overlapping routes.

Duffy also said passengers who bought tickets with credit cards should be able to pursue refunds or chargebacks, while other claims may have to move through bankruptcy proceedings. Spirit said credit and debit card purchases made directly with the airline would be refunded automatically.

The shutdown has reignited debate over the blocked JetBlue-Spirit merger. In 2024, the U.S. Justice Department celebrated JetBlue’s decision to abandon its $3.8 billion acquisition of Spirit, arguing the merger would have meant higher fares and fewer choices. Senator Elizabeth Warren had also warned that a JetBlue-Spirit merger would lead to “fewer flights and higher fares,” calling the blocked deal a win for flyers.

Now, critics argue the loss of Spirit may produce the very outcome regulators feared: fewer low-cost seats and rising fares, especially in leisure-heavy markets like Florida and the Caribbean.

That concern is not abstract. Spirit was still advertising low-cost flights from Fort Lauderdale to Kingston and Montego Bay in Jamaica, and to Santo Domingo, Santiago and Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic. Its terminated and active destination lists also show Caribbean reach including The Bahamas, Aruba, Belize, Cayman and Cuba.

For Caribbean travellers, the impact was immediate: cancelled flights, refund uncertainty, frantic rebooking and emotional farewells from staff who learned abruptly that the airline was finished.

For Grand Turk, the impact is less immediate but potentially more strategic.

The capital has been promised stronger air access for years, with Government tying direct airlift to broader plans for hotel development, tourism expansion and improved visitor movement beyond Providenciales. But no confirmed South Florida carrier ever materialized publicly, and now one of the few low-cost airlines suited to that route is gone.

The question for Government and the Airports Authority is simple: who were the two airlines, where do those talks stand, and does Spirit’s shutdown narrow the path for Grand Turk’s long-promised direct flight into South Florida?

Angle by Deandrea Hamilton. Built with ChatGPT (AI). Magnetic Media — CAPTURING LIFE.

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NO HURRICANES. NO PANDEMIC. STRONG FINANCES. WHY NO DIVERSIFICATION?

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Turks and Caicos, May 4, 2026 – Six budget cycles. Six years of polished plans and confident projections. Yet the question raised by Opposition Leader Edwin Astwood is now landing with force: where is the economic diversification?

Astwood’s response to the 2026/27 Budget cut past the numbers and went straight to what he described as a pattern of promises without delivery.

“Why are the promises not yet realized?” he asked in the House. “Why do costs continue to crush ordinary households?”

For him, the issue is not whether diversification is necessary—but whether it is actually happening.

Referring to repeated commitments by the administration of Charles Washington Misick to broaden the economic base, Astwood challenged what he said was a gap between intention and outcome.

“This bold assertion was never attempted nor achieved—just words on paper,” he said, before delivering the line that has since drawn attention:

“The Premier and his Ministers have bold talk, weak walk.”

Astwood pointed to what he called a “pattern of non-performance,” arguing that despite years of pledges, residents have yet to see clear evidence of new industries capable of strengthening the country’s long-term resilience.

His critique lands in a very specific context.

Previous administrations navigated some of the most difficult periods in modern history—Hurricanes Irma and Maria, followed by the COVID-19 pandemic. Those years were defined by crisis management and recovery.

By contrast, Astwood suggested the current administration has governed in comparatively stable conditions.

The underlying question is now sharper:

with stability, strong revenues, and improved financial standing—what has been built?

Astwood pressed the issue further by breaking it down into specifics—asking whether new sectors had been meaningfully developed, whether jobs had been created outside traditional industries, and whether the country is any less vulnerable today than it was years ago.

“The entire country knows that the answer… is no,” he said.

His intervention reflects the constitutional role of the Opposition—to test Government performance and demand accountability over time, not just within a single budget.

The concern he raised is not new. Economic diversification has long been identified as critical for a small, tourism-dependent economy like the Turks and Caicos Islands. External shocks—from global crises to disruptions in travel—have repeatedly exposed that vulnerability.

That is why the issue continues to resonate, particularly among younger residents looking for broader opportunity and long-term stability.

Astwood’s closing point brought it back to trust:

“Progress that exists only in speeches does not inspire confidence. Progress that exists only on paper does not build trust.”

Six years on, the debate is no longer about whether diversification should happen.

It is whether the country can clearly see that it has.

Angle by Deandrea Hamilton. Built with ChatGPT (AI). Magnetic Media — CAPTURING LIFE.

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WOMEN REGAIN GROUND IN CABINET AS AKIERRA MISSICK RETURNS TO FRONT BENCH

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The Turks and Caicos Islands Cabinet sees a renewed boost in female representation with the return of Akierra Mary Deanne Missick—a seasoned leader whose reinstatement signals both experience restored and a notable shift in the current administration’s approach to governance.

Her appointment as Minister of Home Affairs, effective May 1, 2026, follows a period where female presence in Cabinet had thinned. That shift traces back to the Progressive National Party’s re-election in February 2025, when portfolios were reassigned and former Tourism Minister Connolly was not returned to that post, leaving a noticeable gender imbalance at the executive level.

Now, with Missick’s return, that balance begins to correct—and the public response has been unmistakable. Across social platforms and in community chatter, the reaction has been one of joy and approval, welcoming back a figure many regard as one of the most capable and consistent voices in national leadership.

Missick, the Member of Parliament for Leeward and Long Bay, has held her seat since 2012, making her arguably the most firmly elected representative within the PNP. Her political résumé is extensive: former Deputy Premier, former Deputy Leader of the party, former Minister of Physical Planning and Infrastructure Development, and once the Government’s Leader of Business in the House.

Her return also follows a turbulent chapter in her political journey. During the first term of Premier Charles Washington Misick, Missick was abruptly removed from Cabinet by the Premier. She was one of two ministers dismissed during that term, a move that sparked widespread discussion about internal dynamics within the administration.

Fast forward to 2026, and the political landscape has shifted again. Just weeks after the termination of Otis Morris in April, the Home Affairs portfolio entered a period of uncertainty. Initially, responsibilities were split among three ministers—Shaun Malcolm, E. Jay Saunders, and Deputy Premier Jamell Robinson—after the Premier had indicated he would temporarily assume oversight.

That arrangement, however, appears to have been short-lived.

With Missick now formally sworn in, the Government has moved to consolidate leadership of the Home Affairs Ministry under a single, experienced hand. The official statement from the Office of the Premier points to her legal expertise as a decisive factor, noting the ministry’s substantial legislative agenda and the need for rigorous oversight.

Her return is more than administrative—it is symbolic. It reflects a recalibration within Cabinet, restoring both institutional experience and a stronger female voice at the decision-making table.

The number of women in Cabinet now stands at two—Akierra Mary Deanne Missick and Rachel Taylor, who serves as Minister of Education, Youth, Sports and Culture—marking a modest but notable increase in female representation at the highest level of Government.

For many residents, the message is clear: a tested leader is back, and with her, a sense of balance and confidence in the Government’s direction.

Angle by Deandrea Hamilton. Built with ChatGPT (AI). Magnetic Media — CAPTURING LIFE.

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