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BREAKING NEWS: (CORRECTED) Hon Connolly speaks, says Independent not PNP

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Providenciales, Turks and Caicos – March 20, 2018 – (CORRECTED) On Thursday March 15, in the House of Assembly, I requested to move my seat from the government benches and to sit elsewhere in the House.

I walked the floor to sit as an Independent not, let me be clear, with the PNP.

I believe I owe the public and my supporters an explanation. 

I was voted in by more than 3,000 people in the 2016 election to represent them and to help bring about the change that the country wanted.

Since being fired by the Premier as a Minister in June 2017, without explanation, I have been side-lined.

For the last 9 months I have not been contacted by the Premier nor anyone in Government. I have not been asked to comment on any bill, nor asked if I can assist with the Hurricane assistance program, nothing. Not one communication in 9 months!

As a back bencher I believe I still have much to offer the government with both ideas and practical solutions to the many problems we face.  The Premier has chosen to ignore me and disrespect the people who voted for me because of her long standing personal animosity towards me.

I have wrestled with my conscience as the problems for this country have multiplied and as this Government under the dominant leadership of the Premier has floundered.

I have watched in silence, as our borders are breached, our children are left to study under atrocious conditions, our tourists are left to collapse from heat in long immigration lines, and Salt Cay, Grand Turk and South Caicos are ignored. 

The Premier’s public pronouncement on Wednesday on Exhale indicated that Honourable Connolly is not part of my team and will never be part of my team certainly cleared all doubt that my exclusion was some type of oversight.  What in fact the Premier was saying was ‘I will ignore the representative of more than 3,000 people, nearly half the voting population, because I do not like her’.

To repeat what I said during election time, for me, ‘enough is enough’. My silence, up to now, has been out of loyalty to the Party and the people who elected me, but I have come to the realization that if I am to be loyal to the Party and the people of this country I need to take a stand against the failings of this Government and the lack of leadership before it is too late.

If I cannot represent my people inside this Government, I will represent them as an independent member outside of Government.

I have spoken to many PDM supporters who agree with my stance and are unhappy with the way this Government has performed.  The PDM voters know that this present Government does not reflect the values and principles of the PDM party, but their protests are muted because of the fear of retribution.  

The fear is justifiable, in my opinion, as I and my family have been the subject of vicious attacks in social media by the unsavory elements who have attached themselves to the coat tails of this Government.

The Premier is a Leader of a Democratic Party with a constitution that was drawn up by the founders of the Party led by Hon. Jags McCartney.The supporters, the Party Branches and the NGC all have a part to play under the PDM Constitution to ensure that the Party represents the people, to ensure democracy.

The PDM, as a Democratic Party, no longer exists. A few influential enablers in the NGC have ceded absolute power to the Premier. The NGC hardly meets, the Constitution is routinely ignored, and the Branches and supporters will not be needed again until 2020, so do not expect your calls to be returned until then.

Those with strong opinions are side-lined or purged from the Party. The list of long serving PDM’s who have been driven out of the Party since the appointment of the Premier as leader in 2012 is long and well known so it does not need repeating.

I am sure my actions will be painted as being disloyal to the Party. They are not! They are the actions of a committed democrat who believes in the party and loves her country.  I have no goals other than for my country to succeed.  I do not play games, I do not do deals and I will not be intimidated.

I am sure that the usual puppets in the social media will say that ‘she was never a real PDM’. But I would ask all PDM members and supporters to consider the other people purged from the Party, some who were founders of the Party, perhaps they were never ‘real PDM’s’.

The truth is that the party stands apart and above any one individual and it is dangerous to label all dissenters as disloyal. That is a recipe for dictatorship, not democracy.

Last week the Premier sought to blame the hardworking civil servants for the queues at the airport. As Minister of Finance (she has many ministries) she is well aware that the chaos at the airport was a direct result of her decision to cut the salaries budget of every department in the Immigration and Border Control Ministry.

The Premier was being disingenuous, but this type of attack on perceived enemies either directly or by proxies in social media is the one defining characteristic of this government.  The ‘I didn’t get the email’ excuse has become a running joke as it has been used so often as the explanation for none attendance at important community events.  Important for the community that is, if not for this government.

The Premier continues to use social media to distract, deflect and blame others for the ills of this country, but the real problems in this country cannot be fixed by the spin doctors.

Without a brave and honest NGC holding the Leader to account then the Government, the PDM Party and the country are destined to the same failed leadership for the next 2.5 years that we have seen in the last 16 months. I am not sure this country can stand another few months of mismanagement let alone 2 years and more.

There has been a remarkably bitter, vicious and long running campaign against me by the Premier since I won my seat in 2012. There was a brief truce during the run up to voting in the 2016 election which, as she gloatingly told me later, was because “she had an election to win”. 

I am comforted that I am not the only one who was fooled by the false promise of the campaign. I am sure all the hotel workers will understand that the Premier ‘had an election to win’, as will the voters who were promised change only to find that the only thing that changed was the promise.

Well I am fooled no longer. As an independent member of the House I will be an outspoken supporter of the promises the PDM party made in the 2016 campaign, including the payment of the 100% service charge for hospitality workers. If there are some who want to brand me as disloyal for seeking to carry out the promises that the PDM made to its supporters and the country in the election, so be it.

Magnetic Media is a Telly Award winning multi-media company specializing in creating compelling and socially uplifting TV and Radio broadcast programming as a means for advertising and public relations exposure for its clients.

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ISU Future Creators Challenge Celebrates Youth Creativity and Intellect

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Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands – March 26, 2026 – The Informal Settlements Unit (ISU) successfully hosted its Future Creators Challenge Prize Distribution Ceremony on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, at its office in Providenciales, recognising outstanding student creativity and participation from across the Turks and Caicos Islands with winners hailing from Providenciales and North Caicos.

The Future Creators Challenge formed a central component of the ISU’s Youth Outreach Programme, an initiative designed to engage young people in understanding the challenges associated with informal settlements while encouraging critical thinking, creativity, and solution-oriented perspectives on national development. Through a combination of educational content, school engagement, and creative competitions, the programme provided students with an opportunity to explore issues of community development in accessible and meaningful ways.

Students competed across three categories: 2D Art, Essay Writing, and Jingle Creation, producing submissions that demonstrated both creativity and thoughtful engagement with the themes of the programme.

The following students were recognised for their outstanding performances:

2D Art Challenge
1st Place – Emily Joree – MILLS Institute
2nd Place – T’Sean Anthony – Thelma Lightbourne Primary School
3rd Place – Jagan Russell – MILLS Institute
4th Place – Eve Harvey – MILLS Institute

Essay Challenge
1st Place – Jordan Pierre – Louis Garland Thomas High School
2nd Place – Kavya Mirwani – British West Indies Collegiate
3rd Place – Mirsendy Obei – Raymond Gardiner High School

Jingle Challenge
1st Place – Naivan Smith – Raymond Gardiner High School

In addition to individual awards, MILLS Institute was presented with a special prize in recognition of submitting the highest number of entries to the ISU Future Creators Challenge, reflecting exceptional student participation and institutional support.

In remarks delivered during the session, ISU Strategic Lead Justice Carlos Simons KC underscored the importance of youth participation in shaping the future of the Turks and Caicos Islands, noting that “the future of the Turks and Caicos Islands depends on young people like you who are willing to engage, to imagine solutions, and to play a role in the development of your communities.” He further encouraged students to continue playing an active role in national development, expressing that he hoped “this is only the beginning of your journey as agents of change here in the TCI.”

The ISU extends its sincere appreciation to all participating schools, students, and teachers as well as the Ministry of Education, Youth, Sports and Culture, whose support contributed to the success of this inaugural Youth Outreach Programme initiative.

The Unit remains committed to expanding its engagement with young people across the Turks and Caicos Islands through innovative, inclusive engagement efforts that support awareness, education, and long-term national development.

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WHERE ARE THE LOCAL ARTISTS?

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Turks and Caicos, March 18, 2026 – Across the Turks and Caicos Islands, the skyline is changing. New resorts rise along the Northern coastline of Providenciales, promising luxury, exclusivity, and world-class experiences designed for the global traveler. These developments are often celebrated as progress, as evidence of economic growth and international relevance.

But beneath that narrative lies a quieter question: who is this development truly for, if it does not meaningfully include the culture of the place it occupies?

More specifically, where are the local artists?

Modern tourism is no longer defined by architecture alone. Today’s traveler is not simply purchasing a room. They are seeking experience, identity, and connection to a place. In response, hospitality brands increasingly market authenticity as a defining feature of luxury.

Encouragingly, there are emerging examples within the Turks and Caicos Islands where this principle is present. Recent developments such as Beaches Resort’s new village extension, Treasure Beach and The Strand TCI have made intentional efforts to incorporate local visual artists into their properties, signalling an understanding that art is not an accessory, but an essential component of place-making.

These efforts demonstrate what is possible. Yet, across many developments, this level of integration remains inconsistent or non-existent. In comparison, the yet to open properties like the Andaz feature videos claiming to be rooted in culture while promoting Nigerian-Canadian and Trinidadian artists; whose work will adorn its walls and shape the narrative of “local culture” to its visitors. There are whispers of developments transporting artists all expenses paid to create and outfit their properties with art.

Instead of commissioning local artists, properties also rely on imported, mass-produced décor or artwork sourced from overseas. The result is a visual identity that could belong anywhere. A resort may sit on TCI Soil, but its interiors frequently tell no story of the islands themselves. This is more than an aesthetic oversight. It is a missed cultural and economic opportunity.

Local artists are not merely decorative contributors. They are interpreters of place, translating the land, its flora, and its lived experience into visual form. In a destination like the Turks and Caicos Islands, where identity is deeply tied to landscape and memory, art plays a critical role in shaping how a place is understood and remembered.

To exclude local artists from major developments is, in effect, to remove one of the most direct expressions of national identity from the visitor experience.

There is also a clear economic cost.

When developments bypass local creatives, funds that could circulate within the domestic economy instead flow outward. This is a form of economic leakage that is rarely discussed but widely felt. Commissioning local artists, licensing their work, and integrating it into design and branding are not acts of charity. They’re investments in a local creative economy with the potential to grow alongside tourism itself.

There remains an outdated assumption that meeting international standards requires looking outward rather than inward. But globally, the opposite is increasingly true. The most competitive destinations are those that embed local culture into their offerings in meaningful ways. Authenticity is no longer optional; it is expected.

The Turks and Caicos Islands should not aspire to look like everywhere else. Its value lies in being unmistakably itself. The positive steps taken by developments such as Beaches’ Treasure Beach and The Strand TCI should not be viewed as exceptions, but as a model. They show that integrating local artists is both achievable and beneficial, enhancing the guest experience while supporting the domestic economy.

This raises an important question for policymakers and developers alike: what would it look like to make this approach standard practice? Practical solutions already exist. Development frameworks/agreements can encourage or require a percentage of project budgets to be allocated to local art. Our newly launched national artist registry by the Department of Culture could streamline procurement and ensure professional standards. Partnerships between developers and cultural institutions could allow artists to be involved from the earliest design stages, rather than as an afterthought.

Hotels themselves can play a role by hosting exhibitions, supporting artist residencies, and incorporating locally produced work into their guest experience. Beyond one-time purchases, licensing agreements can allow artists to benefit from the continued use of their work across branding and digital platforms. None of this is radical. It is standard practice in destinations that understand the long-term value of cultural identity.

At its core, this issue is about more than art. It is about how a country chooses to represent itself, and who is included in that representation. The Turks and Caicos Islands is not simply a collection of beaches and luxery buildings. It is a living culture, shaped by its people, its history, and its environment. Its artists are part of that fabric, producing work that reflects and preserve what makes these islands distinct.

To build a tourism industry that does not meaningfully include them is to create a version of the country that is incomplete.

As development continues, the question is not whether the islands will grow. Growth is already underway. The question is whether that growth will be rooted in the identity of the place, or whether it will continue to operate around it.

In a global market where authenticity carries increasing value, the answer should be clear.

I leave you to ponder:

Turks and Caicos, where are YOUR artists?

About HezronH:

“We are all blended with a swath of experiences; walking, breathing, and thinking creatures full of insight and emotions expelled through every single pore. Our aura illuminates spaces of darkness and drives ideas through vision, endowing minds with fragments of personality shimmering through a kaleidoscope of colour.”

Turks and Caicos Islands’ artist Hezron Henry’s work is an exploration of this concept, via his practice. His body of work consists of oil stick, oil pastel and acrylic on paper, canvas, and digital painting, adapting both traditional and modern painting mediums to his signature style. His art is laden with vibrant colours and a link is established highlighting the emotive power of colour. Drawing inspiration from his youth, collecting comics, and his everyday interactions as an adult, he bridges youthful vibrancy and rule-breaking with the depth of an individual’s search for belonging in a region, still underrepresented, and overlooked.

Hezron infuses his portraits with introspection and longing while vivid colours harken to a palette present in Fauvism.

His passion is honest artistic expression, creating an experience people can enjoy and connect with on an ethereal level.

As one of Turks and Caicos’ most prolific artists he has exhibited in cities across Australia, New Zealand, the UK, Trinidad & Tobago at CARIFESTA, Portland (USA), and at Art Takes 2021 (NYC). Hezron has also had the pleasure of being featured in several publications: Beautiful Bizarre Magazine, Wacom’s “The Next Level,” Turks and Caicos Magazine, and selected as “Curators’ Picks: Emerging” on international art platform Artsy.

Select Achievements/Exhibitions/Publications/Projects

2024 – Indelible Imprints, Group Show, SaveArtSpace x Gallery 90220, Los Angeles

2024 – Feature, Cacique (interCaribbean In-Flight Magazine), Apr – Jun

2024 – Interview, Up and Away (Bahamasair In-Flight Magazine), Apr – Jun

2023 – Curators’ Picks: Emerging – Artsy

2023 – Curators’ Choice: Atlantic World Art Fair

2023 – Print It!, Group Exhibit, Leeds, UK

2022 – Caribbean Metaverse Art Week, Decentraland

2022 – Deus: The Quest for Divinity, Solo Show, Black Pony Gallery, Artsy Viewing Room

2021 – Expression Against Oppression, Group Exhibit, SaveArtSpace, Portland

2020 – Drawn Vol. 4: Leaders in Contemporary Illustration

2020 – Exclusive Evening of Art Exhibition, Group Show, Providenciales

2019 – Across Boundaries Exhibition, Group Show, Trinidad and Tobago National Museum

2019 – Apparel Collab, Konk

2018 – Fabric Prints, bēchë 2019 Collection

2017 – EP Cover, Maskanoo, Lady Livz

2017 – The Next Level Exhibition, Group Show: Sydney, Melbourne & Auckland

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ISU Supports Successful Multiagency Demolition Exercise in Blue Hills

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Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands, 23 October 2025 — The Crown Land Unit, supported by the Informal Settlements Unit (ISU) and Immigration and Border Services, led the successful execution of a reclamation exercise in Blue Hills on Wednesday October 15, 2025. The Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force provided security for the operation, which formed part of the Government’s ongoing mandate under the Crown Land Ordinance to prevent squatting and encroachment on Crown Land.

During inspections conducted by the Crown Land Unit, illegally constructed timber buildings were identified on parcels 60501/091 and

60501/092. Notices of Illegal Occupation were issued in accordance with the Crown Land Ordinance; however, the persons responsible for the construction failed to comply with the instructions contained in the notices. As a result, enforcement action was taken to remove the structures and reclaim the land.

The exercise resulted in the full reclamation of 0.84 acres of Crown Land, with the removal of sixteen unauthorized and unoccupied timber structures across the two parcels. Of these, four structures were located on parcel 60501/091 (measuring 0.49 acres) and twelve structures on parcel 60501/092 (measuring 0.35 acres).

The ISU reaffirms its commitment to supporting partner agencies in the coordinated management of Crown Land, ensuring that all enforcement actions are carried out lawfully, efficiently, and in the public interest.

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