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Harold Charles, Appointed Member to the HOA, goes out with a Bang 

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Dana Malcolm 

Staff Writer 

 

 

#TurksandCaicos, April 19, 2024 – In an explosive, self-proclaimed, final budget speech to the people of the Turks and Caicos, Harold Charles, Governors Appointed Member is expressing frustration that many Turks and Caicos Islanders are locked out of top jobs in the country and unable to build wealth.

”I’ve been in this country for 50 years and I’ve noticed all those big developments that come in— the majority of [managers]are foreign people. After 50 years, when are we going to have Belongers manage those businesses?” Charles asked.  “I’m upset, I’m frustrated [this is] their home.  They have nowhere else to go—- If we don’t empower our Turks and Caicos Islanders we will never get out of living paycheck to paycheck.”

Charles echoed what thousands of locals have been saying for years about the failure of successive governments to get the economic success in the country on a level that residents can participate in it.  The member maintained that not only were many locals working for scraps overseas and at home, but that it was the prerogative of the government to create avenues for them to move upward.

”I know the government’s heart is in the right place but somehow we’re not getting it together.  I’m talking (about) both PDM and PNPs. It must change.  There are many islanders overseas taking crummy jobs when all this opportunity is in the Turks and Caicos Islands.”

Calling on the government to enforce laws which allow islanders to get a foothold in lucrative industries, Charles maintained that TCIG could not let investors come and do as they liked.

”We have all these big companies making millions.  They brag about how much they’re making, yet how much do they contribute to the development of our people?”

Charles encouraged the government to mandate that locals were hired in the large developments, taking place across the country.

Capital projects and their execution was another issue that the member highlighted

”Over the past three years in office, we seem to be dragging our feet when it comes to the execution of projects,” he said, “the last budget reflected bitter-sweet sentiment.”

The government managed to spend $29 million of a $57 million capital project budget in 2023/24 financial year.

“Mr. Speaker prior, we promised the people infrastructural investment, improved roads, ease with doing business with TCIG, more scholarships, increased home care, a $900,000 special needs school.”

The Appointed member was also frustrated with the amount of money being allocated to crucial areas including the absence of allocations for a special needs school.

”We were promised that no Turks and Caicos Islander would be left behind while I appreciate the government’s commitment to ensuring this. I am concerned that the relatively low level of funding allocated to education and infrastructure may hinder the effectiveness of effort,” The member stressed.

Closing his speech, Charles maintained that it was “crucial that the sectors receive additional support in order to provide citizens with the necessary resources and opportunities for their development.“

Mr. Speaker it is imperative that we allocate our resources adequately and streamline processes to enhance the ease of doing business with the Turks and Caicos Government. We must priortise increasing service delivery capacity in critical departments such as the customer service department, the register of records, the department of motor vehicles and the list goes on,” express Charles.

Charles reminded that there is a growing demand on the services TCIG provides, especially as the country enjoys unprecedented, year on year, exponential economic growth.

Charles alongside Jameka Williams (Government Appointed Member) Willin Belliard (Governor’s Appointed Member number one) and Alvin Garland (Opposition Appointed Member) will very likely be the last set of appointed members in the House of Assembly of the Turks and Caicos as it transitions to a wholly elected parliament.

Harold Charles indicated it was unlikely he would join any leadership race describing the 2024-2025 Budget contribution as likely his final.

Government

GOVERNMENT BUILDS CAPACITY, NO TALK OF INDEPENDENCE YET

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Turks and Caicos, March 18, 2026 – Despite securing significant constitutional reforms within the past year — including new powers that allow for a national referendum — Premier Charles Washington Misick made no mention of independence or any vote on the country’s political future during his 2026 State of the State Address, signalling what appears to be a continued strategy of building institutional strength before raising the question with the electorate.

The absence of any reference to a referendum stood out, particularly after the Turks and Caicos Islands successfully negotiated constitutional changes with the United Kingdom that expanded the authority of elected leaders and modernised the structure of Government.

Those reforms, which took effect last year, increased the size of Parliament, allowed for more Cabinet ministers, extended the life of a government from four to five years, and strengthened the role of elected officials in domestic affairs. The amendments also included provisions allowing for a referendum to be held on matters of national importance, a change widely viewed as giving the territory greater flexibility in determining its future political direction.

In his address, the Premier spoke of the reforms as moving the country toward “fuller self-government,” noting that the changes deliver a fully elected Parliament, widen delegated responsibility in external affairs and give elected leadership clearer authority and accountability to the people.

However, while the speech emphasised sovereignty, national security and stronger local institutions, it stopped short of any suggestion that the Government intends to call a referendum on independence or any other change in constitutional status.

Instead, the tone of the address suggested a focus on strengthening systems at home before considering further political steps.

The Premier outlined plans to expand the Police Force, strengthen the Border Force, increase the role of the Turks and Caicos Islands Regiment, modernise government through digital transformation, and improve immigration control through biometric border technology — all measures he said are necessary to secure the country’s future.

He also pointed to economic stability, infrastructure development and expanded investment as priorities, repeatedly framing the Government’s approach as one of building a stronger and more secure nation before taking on larger challenges.

The 2024 constitutional amendments, agreed between the Turks and Caicos Islands Government and the United Kingdom, formally expanded the number of elected members in the House of Assembly, increased the number of Ministers who may serve in Cabinet, extended the Parliamentary term to five years, strengthened Cabinet authority in domestic matters, and introduced provisions allowing for a referendum to be held on issues of national importance. The changes also widened delegated responsibility to local leaders in key areas of governance, marking one of the most significant steps toward greater self-government in recent decades.

The constitutional reforms achieved last year were seen by many observers as laying the groundwork for greater autonomy, and potentially future debate on independence, but the latest State of the State suggests the Government is moving cautiously.

For now, the message from the Premier appears clear: before any question of political status is put to the people, the country must first strengthen its institutions, its economy and its capacity to govern itself.

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

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$6M Digital Transformation Drive to expand E-Government, National ID and Biometric Borders

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Turks and Caicos – A $6 million digital transformation programme launched after the 2024 government cyber breach is now driving a major push toward e-government in the Turks and Caicos Islands, with new systems planned for online payments, national digital identification and biometric border controls.

In his 2026 State of the State Address, Premier Charles Washington Misick said weaknesses exposed by the cyber-attack made it clear that government technology systems must be modernised to improve security, efficiency and public service delivery.

The Premier said the three-year digital agenda includes stronger network security, a redesigned government data system, new identity management tools and the creation of a National Security Operations Centre to monitor threats.

He told the country that modernising government services through digital transformation and e-governance is no longer optional but necessary for transparency, accountability and national progress.

One of the centrepieces of the plan is the National Digital ID Programme, which the Government says will modernise civil registration, establish a national population register and make it easier for residents to access public services while strengthening national security and election integrity.

The Premier also pointed to early success with the new E-Pay system, reporting that more than $1 million in government payments had already been made online within days of its launch in February, reducing long lines, paperwork and processing delays while improving transparency in public transactions.

Digital transformation is also extending to the country’s borders.

The Government confirmed that a multi-million-dollar Digital Borders Programme will introduce biometric screening and automated E-Gate technology at ports of entry, allowing citizens and low-risk travellers to move more quickly through immigration while giving authorities real-time access to identity and status information.

The move aligns with wider security standards being implemented across British Overseas Territories, where upgraded border technology is being introduced to strengthen immigration control and improve passenger processing.

Officials say the changes are part of a broader effort to create a more modern, secure and efficient public service, with additional digital systems planned across government departments over the next several years.

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

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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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