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TCI Blogger & CPA critiques Chamber report on ‘Vaxxed’ Rule impact

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#TurksandCaicos, August 27, 2021 – The Chamber of Commerce analysis on the impact of a new vaccine mandate for tourists over the age of 16 to Turks and Caicos drew response from Drexwell Seymour, Certified Public Accountant, talk show host and TCI Blogger who believes the report paints an inaccurate picture.

“I think it is great that the chamber has done an analysis but I believe it is misleading and has not captured a true picture of our industry. Of course with government policies and the increase in the spread of the Delta Variant in many places, it is a challenge to predict the impact that COVID 19 will have on the economy.

For example, when the country opened for business, there were many who thought there would be less tourism arrivals but we have seen significant increase in the arrivals of tourists and for some resorts, the occupancy levels were higher than what they were prior to the emergence of COVID 19.”

Seymour, HLB Turks and Caicos in his article entitled:  Some issues with the Chamber of Commerce Report, which was posted Monday August 21 at his website offered scrutiny on the linchpins of the analysis, saying the blanket focus on US vaccination rates was wrong, it should have been targeted at Turks and Caicos source markets excluding travellers in the over 65 year demographic because of their age is presumptive and that the report does not factor in the possibility of positives of the new policy, which takes effect on September 1.

“The report has used 55% vaccination rate for individuals between18 to 64 and has excluded individuals over 65. I have a problem with this as the Chamber is using the average rate for the US.  Average means some people are below and some people are above. Furthermore, the majority of our tourists are coming from the East Coast and therefore the vaccination rate used should have been based the vaccination rate from the East Coast rather than using the average for all of the United States.

In the CDC report it has stated that “several states in the South and West, for example have vaccinated a smaller share of their population with a first or single dose than in other regions.” States such as New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania are above the US average ranging from 66% to 68% fully vaccinated.”

The Turks and Caicos Chamber of Commerce, in the report released on Friday, estimated losses could hit $96 million.  But Seymour is convinced his cited generalisations, unconsidered factors, outdated data and imbalance in the report come together for, what he called a “misleading” analysis.

“The report has not considered any positive impact of the Government policies. The thing is people that are unvaccinated really don’t want to travel as much as people who are vaccinated. Therefore, it is possible that the country may attract more guests to the islands from vaccinated people even though vaccinated people are not exempted from getting COVID 19 or the Delta variant. However, people that are vaccinated feel more safe travelling and especially to a destination that only takes vaccinated people,” said Mr. Seymour in explaining what could be positive spin-offs from the policy.

Drexwell Seymour said he believes there will be cancellations, but he is doubtful it will be to the tune of nearly $100 million.

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GET UP! TURKS & CAICOS NEEDS WORK, NOT WORDS

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By Deandrea Hamilton

 

GRAND TURK, Turks and Caicos Islands — One of the most stirring moments of the 2026 Right Excellent J.A.G.S. McCartney Memorial and Wreath Laying Ceremony came not from a veteran politician or government leader, but from a young Turks and Caicos Islander whose message landed with conviction, urgency and unmistakable patriotism.

National Youth Parliamentarian, Howard University scholar, CARIFTA medalist and Turks and Caicos Society of Young Leaders founder Antwon Walkin delivered a speech that challenged citizens to move beyond rhetoric and recommit themselves to the difficult work of nation-building. Walkin, one of the twin grandsons of former Deputy Chief Minister Hon. Hilly Ewing, was among the featured speakers at the J.A.G.S. McCartney Memorial observance.

Speaking under the theme, “Honouring Our Pioneers, Advancing the Nation,” Walkin reminded listeners that the two ideas cannot be separated.

“To honour our pioneers is not to freeze them in history or reduce them to symbols,” he said. “It is to take responsibility for what they left behind.”

Walkin’s address formed a highlight of the ceremony held at the J.A.G.S. McCartney Memorial Site in Grand Turk and streamed live across the islands.

Drawing inspiration from the children’s choir’s rendition of We Are Out to Build the Turks and Caicos, Walkin focused on a warning contained within the song itself — that anger and selfishness can spoil the nation.

“The greatest threats to our nation are not always external,” he said. “We tend to look so far away for the enemy, but sometimes they are right beside us.”

The grandson of former Deputy Chief Minister Hon. Hilly Ewing, Walkin spoke passionately about the lessons handed down by his grandfather, who taught him that nothing was more important than God, family and country.

But family, he explained, extends beyond bloodlines.

“In the Turks and Caicos Islands, family is much broader than we sometimes realize,” he said, arguing that national progress depends on citizens seeing one another as partners in a shared future rather than rivals divided by politics, personal interests or island loyalties.

Repeatedly, Walkin returned to a central theme: the country’s future cannot be built through speeches, slogans or ceremonial observances alone.

“Today is not a day for despair. It is a day for decision,” he declared.

“The future cannot be built on symbolism alone. It must be built on action.”

The young leader challenged listeners to confront what he described as barriers that continue to slow national progress, including inefficiency, division and a culture that too often settles for less than its potential.

“I’ve seen so much potential delayed by process, so many dreams deferred by inefficiency and so many young people disconnected from systems that should inspire them,” Walkin said.

Then came one of the speech’s most memorable lines.

“I will not be part of the generation that watched decline. I will be part of the generation that interrupted it.”

The declaration drew visible reactions from the audience and underscored the energy that has helped make Walkin one of the country’s emerging young voices.

Throughout his remarks, he highlighted the achievements of Turks and Caicos Islanders who have excelled on regional and international stages, arguing that excellence is already embedded in the nation’s DNA.

He pointed to citizens who have distinguished themselves in business, aviation, sports, public service and international leadership, saying their accomplishments prove that success is not foreign to the people of the Turks and Caicos Islands.

Walkin also challenged citizens to think differently about prayer and national development.

Referencing Jamaica’s National Anthem, he noted that the anthem is more than a song — it is a prayer for wisdom, justice, truth and vision.

“The Turks and Caicos Islands needs to reclaim vision,” he said.

He questioned whether citizens are merely praying for relief from challenges or actively working toward the future they hope to see.

“My mother always told me you can’t pray for something you’re not willing to work for,” Walkin said.

It was perhaps the clearest expression of the message woven throughout his address: faith must be matched by effort.

As the ceremony honoring National Hero J.A.G.S. McCartney drew to a close, Walkin urged citizens not to surrender the promise of the nation to mediocrity, doubt or selfishness.

“Nation-building has never been for the timid,” he said.

“It has always belonged to those bold enough to imagine more, brave enough to demand more and disciplined enough to build more.”

For many in attendance, it was a speech worthy of the occasion — one that honored the legacy of the country’s first Chief Minister while issuing a direct challenge to the generation now entrusted with carrying that legacy forward.

Developed by Deandrea Hamilton • with ChatGPT (AI) • edited by Magnetic Media.

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SHOCKING:  PRISON SENTENCES FOR MISICKS and HANCHELL IN DRAMATIC CLOSE TO TRIAL  

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By Deandrea Hamilton

 

Turks and Caicos, May 29, 2026 – In a decision that many believed might never come, three of the most recognizable figures in modern Turks and Caicos Islands history have been sentenced to prison.

Former Premier Michael Misick, once regarded by supporters as a transformational leader who helped propel the country’s tourism boom, was sentenced Thursday to an effective prison term of four years and 26 days. Former Cabinet Minister McAllister “Piper” Hanchell was sentenced to three years, while attorney Thomas “Chal” Misick, the former premier’s brother, received an effective sentence of four years.

The sentences bring a dramatic new chapter to what has become one of the most impactful corruption prosecutions ever undertaken in the Turks and Caicos Islands.

The convictions themselves were delivered on February 4, 2026. But it was the sentencing hearing over the past week that captivated public attention as defence attorneys mounted passionate and at times emotional arguments urging Justice Rajendra Narine to spare the men from imprisonment.

For Michael Misick, veteran attorney Gilbert Peterson argued that prison was unnecessary and potentially dangerous. He pointed to Misick’s age, health concerns, family responsibilities and the extraordinary delay in the proceedings, which stretched across more than a decade.

Peterson reminded the court that Misick had already spent 339 days in custody in Brazil during extradition proceedings and argued that the former premier had effectively lived under the weight of prosecution for years.

The court also heard that Misick is the father of seven children, including a young child who would grow up without his father if imprisonment was imposed. Character references from pastors, bishops and respected members of the community urged mercy.

The defence further highlighted Misick’s role in the development of the Turks and Caicos Islands, citing tourism expansion, economic growth, job creation and major development projects undertaken during his years in office.

For Hanchell, defence attorneys presented evidence of serious health concerns, including a recent stress-related cardiac event that required emergency medical treatment in the Cayman Islands. The court also viewed a recorded appeal from his 94-year-old bedridden mother and considered numerous testimonials submitted on his behalf.

For Chal Misick, the defence pointed to his previous good character, professional standing and the extraordinary delay in bringing the matter to conclusion.

In the end, Justice Narine accepted many of the mitigating circumstances presented by the defence. He acknowledged the lengthy delay in the proceedings, constitutional concerns surrounding the pace of the trial, the time Misick spent imprisoned in Brazil, previous good character, public service, family circumstances and health considerations.

Yet despite those factors, the court concluded that the seriousness of the offences demanded imprisonment.

It was a clear signal that status, influence, public achievements and personal hardship could not outweigh what the court viewed as corruption at the highest levels of government.

The judge repeatedly emphasized that corruption by public officials represents a profound breach of public trust and that custodial sentences were necessary both to punish wrongdoing and deter similar conduct by others entrusted with public office.

In Michael Misick’s case, the court found that the offending fell within the highest category of seriousness, involving substantial financial benefits, abuse of high office and sophisticated arrangements designed to facilitate and conceal corrupt conduct.

The judge set an initial starting point of eight years before applying significant reductions for mitigating factors, including delay, constitutional breaches and time served in Brazil.

For years, supporters argued that the case would never end.

On Thursday, it ended with prison sentences.

For many citizens, the moment is difficult to process.

Michael Misick dominated the political landscape for years and remains one of the most influential leaders in modern Turks and Caicos history. Hanchell was a senior member of Cabinet. Chal Misick was among the country’s best-known attorneys.

For younger Turks and Caicos Islanders, it may be difficult to appreciate the significance of the moment. There was a time when Michael Misick appeared politically untouchable. His administration oversaw an era of explosive development, unprecedented investment and international attention. Admirers credited him with helping to modernize the country and accelerate its economic rise. Critics argued that the same period created conditions that ultimately led to the Commission of Inquiry and the criminal prosecutions that followed.

On Thursday, those two competing legacies collided inside a Supreme Court courtroom.

As Turks and Caicos reflects on the outcome, credit must also be given to journalists who remained committed to covering the case through its many twists, delays and legal complexities. Magnetic Media relied heavily on the detailed courtroom reporting of TCI Sun Publisher and Editor-in-Chief Hayden Boyce during the final stages of the proceedings. Boyce remained closely engaged with the case and provided some of the most comprehensive accounts of the sentencing hearings as the matter moved toward its conclusion.

Regardless of where public opinion falls, few would have predicted fifteen years ago that a former premier, a former cabinet minister and a prominent attorney would one day stand convicted and sentenced to prison in the same corruption case.

That reality now forms part of the permanent historical record of the Turks and Caicos Islands.

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

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Caribbean News

850 Fish Pots in the Making: Further Support Helps Fishers Rebuild Their Livelihoods After Hurricane Melissa

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Whitehouse, Westmoreland, Jamaica – May 28, 2026 — Continuing its support to hurricane-affected fishing communities, the Sandals Foundation has partnered with Good360 to equip 170 fishers from Belmont in Westmoreland and Galleon and Parrottee in St. Elizabeth with critical mesh wire—materials that will be transformed into as many as 850 fish pots, further strengthening livelihoods and local food supply across Jamaica’s western coastline.

The wire, valued at J$2.97 million, supports the coastal districts where Hurricane Melissa dismantled fishing gear, disrupted income streams, and placed added strain on already vulnerable food systems. The initiative will be implemented through local fishing leaders, who will oversee the equitable distribution of materials to those most impacted by the Category 5 storm.

This latest distribution builds on a series of targeted interventions delivered by the philanthropic organization over the past six months. In November, the Sandals Foundation distributed 120 rolls of fish wire and 6,720 litres of gasoline courtesy of RUBiS Energy Jamaica to over 100 fishers in Whitehouse and Old Bay. The intervention enabled the production of up to 600 fish pots and the restart of fishing operations.  Earlier this year, a partnership with Good360 also saw the provision of more than 50 generators to fishing villages and schools to continue the recovery process.

“Rebuilding takes root when people are able to earn again,” said Heidi Clarke, Executive Director of the Sandals Foundation. “For fishers, that begins with the tools to return to sea. This continued support is about restoring independence, strengthening communities, and ensuring that the systems people rely on every day can function again.”

Recovery from a storm like Hurricane Melissa takes months, sometimes years,” said Morgan Loomis, Vice President of Disaster Response & Recovery at Good360. “For coastal communities, the storm destroyed people’s homes and livelihoods overnight. Our work with the Sandals Foundation is changing that reality. When fisherfolk have access to critical materials like fishing wire, the ripple effects reach the entire community. Fishers get back to work. Pot makers have orders to fill. Families have income. Children stay in school. That is what meaningful recovery looks like in action,” she said.

Across the Caribbean, coastal fishing communities play an outsized role in national food security and local economies. Strengthening their recovery is not just about rebuilding individual livelihoods—it is about reinforcing the systems that sustain entire populations.

Because when the sea begins to provide again, communities begin to steady.

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