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South Caicos Feels the Pressure: Border Breaches, Illegal Work, and a Public Plea for Action

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By Deandrea Hamilton | Editor

 

South Caicos, Turks and Caicos Islands — July 17, 2025 – The Turks and Caicos Islands Border Force (TCIBF) continues to face complex challenges in its effort to protect the nation’s borders, with South Caicos emerging as one of the most pressured areas.

On July 9, the Director General of the Border Force, Mr. Emilio Seymour, hosted a community meeting at the Conch Grounds in South Caicos, inviting residents to share their concerns directly with leadership. The engagement formed part of the agency’s “Safer Borders, Safer Communities” outreach campaign, which also included door-to-door visits in North Caicos. According to the Border Force, these sessions were designed to improve transparency, strengthen community relations, and gather first-hand insight into the evolving border environment.

South Caicos has become a focal point in recent months.

On June 3, a migrant sloop carrying 50 individuals made landfall. Forty-nine (49) of them were apprehended; we learned about the incident thanks to reporting from Eagle Legal News Network. The incident reinforced concerns that the island is increasingly being used as an entry point for undocumented migrants, many of whom are believed to be seeking illegal employment.

Earlier, in October 2024, the Border Force led a targeted operation in South Caicos addressing illegal work activity.  The two-day effort resulted in seven arrests — four for illegally working in the territory and three others for matters including cannabis possession and overstaying. The operation was supported by the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force and underscored the inland approach now being taken to tackle immigration and customs-related offences.

The Turks and Caicos Islands Border Force, established by ordinance in 2024, replaced the former standalone Customs and Immigration Departments. It now functions as a single, unified national agency, responsible for both border-related immigration and customs enforcement. With an intelligence-led, risk-based operational model, the TCIBF has the flexibility to deploy staff across both customs and immigration roles, adapting quickly to threats as they emerge.

The Director General, Mr. Emilio Seymour, holds the authority previously vested in the Collector of Customs and Director of Immigration. He oversees five key operational units, supported by two Deputy Directors and seven Assistant Directors across the islands.

The Border Force says the feedback collected during engagements in both South and North Caicos is currently under review and will inform future policy and operational planning. Residents are being urged to report any suspicious immigration or customs-related activity through official channels, including the TCIintel@gov.tc tip email and the U.S. ICE hotline at 866-347-2423.

As South Caicos continues to develop, the stakes remain high: controlling its borders, protecting its people, and ensuring that economic growth does not come at the cost of security.

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Beaches Turks and Caicos Cricket Club dominates the TCICA T20 Prelim Round  

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PROVIDENCIALES, Turks & Caicos Islands: — The Beaches Turks and Caicos resort Cricket Club has officially topped the preliminary round of the Turks and Caicos Islands Cricket Association T20 competition in spectacular fashion. The squad concluded this crucial phase with highly impressive statistics, establishing themselves as the undisputed team to beat moving forward.

Team captain Sidue Hunter has been heavily instrumental in guiding the squad through their impressive run, expressing deep confidence in their collective abilities. “I am very comfortable with the progress of the squad because we have been playing good, cohesive team cricket,” Hunter stated. He further highlighted the reason for the team’s success this season, “the different areas within the squad, batting, fielding and bowling have been truly representing themselves well out there on the pitch, this is the main reason for our success this season.”

Beyond his strategic captaincy, Hunter has led by brilliant example at the crease, currently topping the competition’s overall batting charts with a staggering 383 runs. However, he is certainly not carrying the offensive load alone, as the profound depth of the Beaches batting order has been a major factor in their high-scoring victories. Teammates Kenneth Lewis and Jerome Daley have provided critical support through the middle overs, securing their places among the league’s top ten highest run-scorers with 139 and 134 runs respectively.

On the defensive side of the pitch, the bowling attack has been effectively spearheaded by the exceptional form of Anthony ‘Moses’ McKnight. The talented bowler has successfully captured 11 crucial wickets so far in the tournament, consistently dismantling the top orders of rival clubs. Reflecting on the squad’s remarkable chemistry and raw talent this year, McKnight confidently noted, “the composition of the team this season is simply the best I have ever seen.”

General Manager Deryk Meany has actively praised the seamless transition of the resort’s collaborative culture onto the competitive cricket pitch. “The team has been showing the true strength of teamwork, as the maturity and experience they display within the different areas of the resort have seamlessly translated onto the field of play,” Meany explained. This unique corporate-athletic synergy highlights the profound benefits of balancing demanding professional responsibilities with competitive recreational sports.

The overarching success of the Beaches cricket team ultimately boils down to their unwavering mutual support and highly unified goals. Meany further emphasized this internal dynamic, proudly adding, “these players represent the true meaning of teamwork, constantly providing support for each other to produce the best possible results.” As the T20 competition inevitably advances into its later stages, this unified and disciplined front makes the club a heavily favoured contender for the championship title.

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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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Elegant Gala Announced to Celebrate 20 Years of TCIAA

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Turks and Caicos, May 4, 2026 – The Turks and Caicos Islands Airports Authority is preparing to mark a major milestone—20 years of aviation leadership—with an elegant gala and awards banquet set for May 30, 2026

The event, themed “Soaring Through 20 Years of Excellence,” will celebrate not only the Authority’s journey, but the people and progress that have helped shape the modern Turks and Caicos Islands.

Attendance is by invitation only, with guests required to RSVP in advance, underscoring the exclusivity of the milestone celebration.

Established in 2006 under the Airports Authority Ordinance, the TCIAA was created to take full control of the country’s airport infrastructure—managing, maintaining and modernising the gateways that connect the islands to the world.

That transition marked a defining moment: the return of key national airport assets into local control and the beginning of a new era in aviation development.

Today, the Authority manages six public airports across the islands, including the country’s main international hub on Providenciales—recently renamed the Howard Hamilton International Airport.

With a workforce estimated between 50 and 200 employees, TCIAA operates as one of the territory’s most critical and high-performing statutory bodies, supporting tourism, trade and national connectivity.

Over the years, the Authority has overseen major upgrades and expansions, facilitated growing international airlift and strengthened partnerships with global airlines—quietly becoming one of the engines behind the country’s booming tourism sector.

It has also leaned into national pride, renaming key airports in honour of iconic Turks and Caicos figures, including JAGS McCartney, Howard Hamilton and Norman B. Saunders—embedding legacy into infrastructure.

Looking ahead, the focus is clear: expansion, modernisation and future-proofing. Plans and discussions continue around significant redevelopment of the Providenciales airport to meet rising demand and elevate the visitor experience.

But before the next chapter begins, the spotlight turns to reflection.

The upcoming gala will bring together stakeholders, aviation professionals and national leaders for what is expected to be a night of recognition, storytelling and celebration.

An evening not just about where TCIAA has been—But where it is going.

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

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