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TCI Cabinet Meeting, Revises Police Record Process & Ends Vaccine Mandate to Visitors

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#TurksandCaicos, March 31, 2023 – His Excellency the Governor, Nigel Dakin, chaired the 7th meeting of Cabinet on Wednesday 22 March 2023 at the Governor’s Residence on Grand Turk.

All Members were present with the exeption of the Hon Minister of Health, away from TCI on Government business.

At this meeting Cabinet:

  • Approved the lifting of the COVID-19 Vaccination requirement for visitors entering the Turks and Caicos Islands with effect from 1 April 2023 and agreed next steps to ensure the nation can respond to any uptick in Covid-19 cases.
  • Was updated on an arbitration case between the TCI Government and InterHealth Canada. Members also agreed next steps.
  • Approved the development of new national criteria, including public consultation, to revise the application and issuance of a Police Record certificates by the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force, seeking to eventually reducing employment categories where records will be required. Members also discussed the inclusion of criteria to allow the TCI Public Service to employ low risk offenders as an example to private sector employers.
  • Approved amendments to, and the implementation of, the Turks and Caicos Islands Official Credit Card Policy, and encouraged its adoption throughout TCIG and its Statutory Bodies.
  • Approved a roadmap for the implementation of International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS) accruals basis of accounting, enhancing accountability, transparency and financial management. Members also approved resources required for this to be implemented.
  • Approved for the Complaints Commission to be relocated to a more central location on Grand Turk. Members also approved next steps including where funding should come from to support the work of the Commission and for new office space to be identified.
  • Approved for the Government to enter into negotiations to purchase Parcels 10304/33, 130 & 131 on Grand Turk to relocate both the Department of Disaster Management and Emergency Services, and the Central Purchasing Unit.
  • Approved for the Government to enter into negotiations to purchase Parcels 10306/68, 69, 10 & 11 on Grand Turk for use by TCI Government Departments.
  • Approved the payment of a claim for rent due to K&T Auto Ltd for vehicles used by Customs Department officials in 2016 for official purposes.
  • Approved the re-appointment of Sharon Simons(Chair), Donovan Francis, Madeline Mills and William Cole Fulford as Members, and Director of Immigration or her representative, Commissioner of Labour or his representative and Permanent Secretary of Finance or her representative as Ex-officio Members of the Work Permit Board – Zone 1 and Sharlene Smith as Secretary of the Board for a period of two years with effect from 1 April 2023 until 31 March 2025.
  • Approved the re-appointment of Nikimo Williams(Chair), Alpheus Pinder, Jennifer Glinton and appointment of Charmaine Clarke as Members, and Director of Immigration or her representative, Commissioner of Labour or his representative and Permanent Secretary of Finance or her representative as Ex-officio Members of the Work Permit Board – Zone 2 and Desireka Glinton as Secretary of the Board for a period of two years with effect from 1 April 2023 until 31 March 2025.
  • Approved the re-appointment of Rayan Williams(Chair), Lofton Morley Jr.,Kitchandra Penn, Deondra Delancy and Lorniqua Gardiner as Members of the Immigration Appeals Tribunal and appointment of Jenika Laporte as Secretary of the Tribunal for a period of one year with effect from 1 April 2023 until 31 March 2024.
  • Approved the appointment of Vernon Alco Williams (Chair), Samuel Williams, Dorn Fulford, Carlis Williams, Arnelle Taylor, Kenya Forbes-Jagger, Kerchell Been Lawers, Yolander Forbes, Wandy Delancy and Edward Hall as Members of the Labour Tribunal for a period of one year with effect from 1 April 2023 until 31 March 2024.
  • Approved the appointment of Peter Forbes (Chair), Bennet Gardiner (Deputy-Chair), Antoine Missick and Darrak Williams as Members of the Air Transport Licensing Authority Board for an period of two years with effect from 1 April 2023 until 31 March 2025.
  • Approved the upgraded appointment of Algernon Dean (Chair), re-appointment of Kenro Gardiner (Deputy-Chair), Brandon Gardiner and appointment of Tony Clarke as Members and Permanent Secretary responsible for TCICAA and Managing Director of the TCICAA as ex-Officio Member of the Turks and Caicos Islands Civil Aviation Authority (TCICAA) Board for a period of two years with effect from 1 April 2023 until 31 March 2025.
  • Approved the appointment of Paul Brie (Chair), Benjamin Durham, Anton Faessler and Kaylea Malcolm as Members of the TCI National Wealth Fund Board for a period of two years with effect from 1 April 2023 until 31 March 2025.
  • Approved the re-appointment of Sonia Williams (Chair), Reverend Julia Williams (Deputy Chair), Gretle B. Dean, Deserika Lightbourne and appointment of Avi Adams as Members and Permanent Secretary for Education or Delegate and the Director of Education as Ex-officio Member of the Education Advisory Board / Scholarship Committee and Sharine Lightbourne as Secretary to the Committee for a period of two years effective 1 April 2023 to 31 March 2025.
  • Approved the re-appointment of Dr Barbara Ambrister (Chair), Dr Marcella Malcolm (Deputy Chair), Richard Gibbs Jnr and appointment of Julianna Musgrove, Selvyn Hawkins and Velma Smith as Members and President of the Turks and Caicos Islands Community College, Permanent Secretary or Deputy Permanent Secretary Finance and Permanent Secretary or Deputy Permanent Secretary Education as Ex-officio Members of the Turks and Caicos Islands Community College Board of Governors and Velma Smith as Secretary to the Board for a period of two years effective 1 April 2023 to 31 March 2025.
  • Approved the extension of the appointment of Clara Gardiner (Chair), Alexandria Missick (Deputy Chair), Owenta Coleby, John Hilton and Shavonda Lewis as Members of the TCI Tourist Board until 30 June 2023.
  • Approved further amendments to the Hurricane Fiona Relief Policy increasing the qualifying threshold of household income, independent valuations and capped benefit to $25,000 per property regardless of value of the assessments.
  • Approved the awarding of the following contracts:
  1. a)       TR 22/19, Consultancy Services for Turks and Caicos Islands Domestic Submarine Cable Strategic Outline Business case,
  2. b)      TCIAA 02/2002, TR 22/09, Furniture and Equipment for TCIAA – LOT A: Office Furniture and Equipment,
  3. c)       TCIAA 03/2002, TR 22/09, Furniture and Equipment for TCIAA – LOT B: Office Furniture and Equipment,
  4. d)      TCIAA 04/2002, TR 22/09, Furniture and Equipment for TCIAA – LOT C: Office Furniture and Equipment,
  5. e)      TCIAA 05/2022, TR 22/39, Grand Turk Perimeter Fencing, and
  6. f)        TR 22/25, Consultancy for the Operationalization of a Credit Union.
  • Members were also updated on issues relating to the Ministry of Immigration.
  • In closing, Members expressed their thanks and gratitude to the Governor for the work he had led on and supported throughout his tenue.

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Government

2,846 Jobs in the Pipeline; TCI with $430 Million Cash

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Turks and Caicos, November 7, 2025 – A record 2,846 new jobs are on the horizon for the Turks and Caicos Islands — a staggering figure that underscores the scale of economic momentum now coursing through the country. The announcement came yesterday as Premier and Minister of Finance, Investment and Trade, Hon. Charles Washington Misick, presented his mid-year report in the House of Assembly.

“Let me repeat, 1.27 billion dollars in development agreements for major projects have been executed,” the Premier told lawmakers. “From these projects we will create one thousand and twenty-three new rooms and two thousand eight hundred and forty-six permanent jobs for the economy.”

In a population of barely 45,000, that number is seismic. It speaks to both the opportunity and the tension of the moment — prosperity that will stretch local capacity and, inevitably, deepen reliance on foreign labour.

$1.27 Billion in Fresh Investments Fueling Growth

The employment surge is being driven by $1.27 billion in new development agreements brokered by Invest TCI between April and September 2025. The investment list is stacked with big-ticket names:

  • Hadley Investments Limited – $1.2 billion
  • The Bight by Dream Hotel – $65.5 million
  • Retreat Development Limited – $7.3 million
  • Amethyst Development Ltd. – $6.8 million

Collectively, these projects will bring 1,023 new rooms online and ignite activity across multiple islands. The Premier noted that 27 development agreements valued at just over $3 billion remain active — 22 in Providencialestwo each in Grand Turk and South Caicos, and one on Ambergris Cay.

Six new foreign direct investment (FDI) projects valued at $755 million have already started between April and September 2025, spread across four islands. Another four domestic investment proposals, worth $407.9 million, have been received for new luxury resorts, townhomes, and mixed-use spaces.

“Tourism continues to be the lifeblood of our economy,” Misick said. “But the pace of investment has been nothing short of vigorous, signaling strong investor confidence and a very promising future.”

The Labour Equation: Prosperity Meets Pressure

For all the celebration, there’s a flip side — the people needed to make this boom possible. The Premier acknowledged the growing reliance on expatriate labour and the strain that comes with it.

Work permit fees brought in $22.6 million during the first six months of the fiscal year — $1.9 million above estimates and $2.7 million higher than last year. Most of those work permits, the Premier confirmed, are tied to tourism and construction, sectors now running at full throttle.

“As construction and allied business activity has increased, so too has the number of work permits,” he said. The message was unvarnished: the more the economy expands, the greater the need for imported hands to build, serve, and sustain it.

It’s a bittersweet reality for a country whose citizens are ambitious but few. The challenge now — and the political test — will be whether the government can pair this expansion with deeper training, education, and local participation so that Turks and Caicos Islanders fill more of these high-value roles in the years ahead.

A Government Flush with Cash

If the development pipeline paints a picture of the future, the balance sheets show the country’s strength right now. The Premier reported that cash flow increased by $63.7 million in the first six months of the fiscal year.

At the end of the 2024/25 financial year, the government’s cash balance stood at $366.3 million — but by the end of September 2025, that figure had climbed to a commanding $430 million.

Of that total, $242.9 million sits in the Consolidated Fund for day-to-day operations, and $88.5 million is available in the Development Fund for project implementation — up sharply from $51.5 million in March.

It’s a level of fiscal cushion that few small island states can claim — one that gives the TCI a rare degree of resilience and maneuverability at a time when global markets are volatile.

A $1.7 Billion Economy — and Climbing

The Premier’s mid-year report confirmed that TCI’s economy now stands at $1.7 billion, with per capita income just over $34,000, among the highest in the Caribbean. Economic growth was a strong 6.5% in 2024, and global ratings agency Standard & Poor’s upgraded the country’s credit rating to A-, citing “sound fiscal management” and cash reserves nearing 30% of GDP.

Still, Misick cautioned against complacency, warning of tariff volatilityinflationary pressures, and U.S. stock market swings that could cool retiree travel — a major visitor segment. “These are realities we cannot ignore,” he said. “But neither will we be complacent. My government is responding proactively — intensifying marketing efforts, introducing targeted promotions, and pursuing new partnerships.”

The Bottom Line

The Turks and Caicos economy is running hot — billions in projects, thousands of jobs, and a government flush with cash. But with that heat comes a balancing act: managing rapid expansion while ensuring Islanders remain at the center of the story.

Because a boom means little if it doesn’t lift the people who call these islands home.

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

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Government

Tamica Prospere Appointed Director of Learning and Development

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Turks and Caicos, September 6, 2025 – The Office of the Deputy Governor of the Turks and Caicos Islands is pleased to announce the appointment of Mrs. Tamica Prospere as the Director of the Department of Learning and Development within the Office of the Deputy Governor.

Mrs. Prospere holds a Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) Associate Diploma in Organisational Learning and Development (RQF Level 5), a Bachelor’s degree in Education from the University of the West Indies (UWI) and an Associate Degree in Education, also from UWI. She has further enhanced her credentials with certifications and coursework in content delivery, human resource management, talent management, and training and development from esteemed institutions, including Mico University College and CIPD.

With a strong foundation in public service and education in St. Lucia, Mrs. Prospere dedicated over a decade to classroom teaching at the secondary school level, beginning in 2002. During her tenure, she educated a diverse student body across various subjects, including Mathematics, Information Technology, and Life Skills, all aimed at fostering students’ personal and social well-being. She also facilitated community adult learning programs, showcasing her enduring commitment to promoting inclusive and varied educational opportunities.

Her career in public service in the Turks and Caicos Islands began in 2014 as a teacher at Marjorie Basden High School. From 2019, she served as the Learning and Development Manager for the legacy Customs Department and later for the TCI Border Force. In this role, she made significant contributions to improvements and championed a culture of professional growth.

Mrs. Prospere has been a strong advocate for leadership development through several key programmes. She conceptualised and introduced the Leading Effectively through Accountability and Development (LEAD) programme for the management team, which has successfully run for three consecutive years, with its most recent leadership reinforcement event held in 2025. Additionally, she implemented several programmes in partnership with educational institutions, resulting in 27 Border Force officers earning continuing professional development (CPD) certifications in supervisory management from UWI and 10 managers completing the Dynamic Leadership course with the Caribbean Maritime University.

She played a pivotal role in developing operational strategic plans and frameworks for both the Customs Department and the TCI Border Force. Mrs. Prospere spearheaded the creation and delivery of professional programmes, such as the Customs Broker Certification Programme. She introduced a Learning Management System (LMS) to facilitate scalable learning for aspiring Customs Brokers.

Moreover, she led the implementation of several significant projects, most notably the Regional Clearance System in the TCI and a comprehensive revamp of customs procedures at Howard Hamilton International Airport, which greatly enhanced operational efficiency. She also facilitated key engagements that strengthened partnerships with leading regional bodies, including the Caribbean Customs Legislation and Enforcement Council (CCLEC), the border security team within CARICOM IMPACS, and the customs advisory arm of CARTAC. These collaborations were instrumental in securing vital technical assistance for training.

Speaking on the appointment, Mrs. Prospere said, “I am honoured to step into this role and lead the Learning and Development Directorate. I believe that a world-class public service is built together. I’m dedicated to partnering with civil servants at all levels to foster a dynamic learning environment where we can collectively develop the skills needed to be adaptable, exceed standards, and deliver truly exceptional service to the public.”

In congratulating Mrs. Prospere, Deputy Governor and Head of the Public Service, H.E. Anya Williams stated, “We are pleased to extend congratulations to Mrs. Tamica Prospere on her appointment as the new Director of the Department of Learning and Development within the Office of the Deputy Governor.

With over a decade of dedicated service in the field of training and development, Mrs. Prospere has consistently demonstrated a deep commitment to building capacity and strengthening the public service workforce in the Turks and Caicos Islands. Her innovative and strategic approach to learning has transformed teams and empowered individuals, ensuring the public service is well-equipped to meet the demands of a constantly evolving landscape.

As the government continues its efforts to enhance service delivery through robust and comprehensive training initiatives, we are confident that Mrs. Prospere’s leadership will be instrumental in advancing a culture of excellence, collaboration and continuous growth across the public sector.

Congratulations Mrs. Prospere, on your well-deserved promotion. We look forward to working with you to shape the future of learning and development in the Public Service in the Turks and Caicos Islands.”

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Government

Melissa Holland Appointed as Public Service Information Officer

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Turks and Caicos, September 6, 2025 – The Office of the Deputy Governor of the Turks and Caicos Islands is proud to announce the appointment of Ms. Melissa Holland as the new Public Service Information Officer within the Office of the Deputy Governor.

Ms. Holland holds an Associate Degree in Business from Turks and Caicos Community College, a Creative Suite Certificate in Website Development from StackSkills, and an Administrative Professional Certification from the College of Administrative Professionals. She has also engaged in continuous learning through Coursera.

Over the course of her career, Ms. Holland has accumulated valuable experience in various roles. She began her journey as a Clerical Officer at the Ministry of Education from June 2007 to May 2009 and was promoted to Secretary to the CEO from December 2009 to April 2010. Subsequently, she served as the Assistant to the Director of Sales, Marketing & Rentals at Apes Hill Club in Barbados from May 2011 to July 2014. Ms. Holland then took on the role of Office Assistant at Growing Soul Records in Miami, FL, from August 2014 to October 2015, followed by another position as an Office Assistant at Arrow Electronics in Denver, CO, from November 2015 to June 2018.

In June 2018, she became a Multimedia Specialist at Shop Genesis and later transitioned to the role of Creative Director at Black Sage Analytics from September 2020 to 2022. More recently, she served as an Administrative Officer at the Ministry of Health and Human Services from December 2022 to March 2023, before moving to the Ministry of Immigration and Border Services as an Administrative Officer from March 2023 to August 2025. She acted as the Communications Officer for Border Force in September 2023.

Upon her appointment, Ms. Holland shared her enthusiasm, stating, “My journey from capturing moments through lifestyle photography to creating designs that honor the vibrance of Caribbean culture has been shaped by both creativity and faith. Stepping into the role of Public Service Information Officer is a privilege and an exciting opportunity to unite my love for storytelling with service. Guided by Proverbs 3:5-6, I trust God to continue directing my path and using my gifts for a greater purpose”.

Her Excellency Anya Williams, Deputy Governor and Head of the Public Service, congratulated Ms. Holland, stating, “We are delighted to congratulate Ms. Melissa Holland on her appointment as Public Service Information Officer and to welcome her to our team in the Office of the Deputy Governor.

In this important role, Ms. Holland will be responsible for the accurate and timely dissemination of both internal and external communications related to the operations of the public service, including circulars, notices, appointment announcements and other official updates.

We are confident that Ms. Holland’s diverse background and professional expertise will be invaluable in fulfilling these responsibilities and we look forward to the meaningful contributions she will undoubtedly bring to the team.

Congratulations, Ms. Holland, on your new appointment!”

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