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5,000 persons to gain employment in coming months

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Kingston, Jamaica, January 24, 2017 – Five thousand Jamaicans are expected to gain employment in the tourism industry through the construction of four hotels, to cost some US$250 million, over the coming months.  Of the four hotels, two will be located in Trelawny, one in Kingston, and the other in Port Antonio.

Addressing the press launch of a revitalised ‘Spruce Up Jamaica’ initiative at the Devonshire, Devon House, St. Andrew, today (January 24), Minister of Tourism, Hon. Edmund Bartlett, said both temporary and permanent job opportunities will be available from the investments.  Providing a breakdown of the jobs, Mr. Bartlett said over 2,000 persons will be employed in Trelawny during the construction phase, while 600 permanent jobs will be available thereafter.  He noted that over 1,000 persons will be employed for the hotel in Port Antonio with 800 permanent jobs, as the room-to-employee ratio will be higher.

Mr. Bartlett said new investors have expressed a desire to invest in the country which augurs well for the continued growth and development of the sector.  “We had enquiries and discussions with a number of potential investors in Europe that will amount to four additional hotels…These are hotels that are now coming at a higher end of the market, because everyone is recognizing that destination Jamaica offers a better value proposition to the visitor,” he said.

In the meantime, he said the country is on track to achieving 15,000 new hotel rooms in five years.  “This year we will cover four million arrivals. We are now at 3.8 million plus (2016), so we have one million to go,” the Minister noted.

Mr. Bartlett said tourism is arguably the strongest sector in the economy with earnings of US$2.5 billion last year. He added that the sector provides tens of thousands of jobs and fuels numerous other sectors, such as agriculture, manufacturing, transportation and entertainment.

‘Spruce Up Jamaica’ is the Ministry’s flagship umbrella programme which includes various initiatives primarily geared at changing attitudes and creating integration among industries and programmes that impact the tourism sector.  The initiative will be driven through the Tourism Product Development Company (TPDCo), which will execute activities directly related to the programme on a day-to- day basis, while the Tourism Enhancement Fund (TEF) will provide the financial support for these projects.

 

Photo credit: Turista magazine

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Multi-Agency Enforcement Action Conducted at Caicos Lodge

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Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands, 14 April 2026The Informal Settlements Unit (ISU), in coordination with the Planning Department and key partner agencies, conducted a multi-agency enforcement exercise on Thursday, April 9, 2026, at Block and Parcel 60802/49 and 60802/65, located in the Caicos Lodge area.

The operation was led by the Planning Department, with coordination by the ISU and support from the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force, the TCI Border Force, Pelican Energy TCI, and DevCon Power Supply. All agencies worked collaboratively to ensure the exercise was carried out in a safe, orderly, and controlled manner.

The enforcement action followed a structured and lawful process in accordance with the Physical Planning framework of the Turks and Caicos Islands. A total of fifty (50) unauthorized structures were removed during the exercise.

Section 45 Enforcement Notices were first issued on the affected parcels on December 11 2024, identifying unauthorized structures in illegal occupation. This was followed by the issuance of Warning Notices on March 26 2026, which clearly advised occupants that they were in breach of planning and land use regulations and provided a 14-day period to remove the structures voluntarily. Despite these notices and the time afforded for compliance, the unauthorized structures remained in place.

The Government wishes to emphasize that the structures removed were unauthorized developments, constructed without the required planning approvals and in breach of established building and land use regulations.

Planning regulations exist to ensure that all developments meet minimum standards for safety and structural integrity. Unauthorized settlements, regardless of appearance, often lack these safeguards and can pose serious risks to occupants and the wider community.

The enforcement of these regulations is therefore not only a legal obligation, but a necessary measure to protect lives, property, and public health.

The Turks and Caicos Islands Government remains fully aware of the housing challenges currently facing the country. However, unlawful development cannot be allowed to proliferate in a manner that compromises safety, undermines planning systems, and infringes on property rights.

All persons undertaking construction or occupation of land must do so in accordance with the law, including obtaining the necessary planning approvals.

The Government will continue to work collaboratively across agencies to:

  •  Uphold planning and development regulations
  •    Protect private and public lands
  •  Prevent the expansion of unsafe and informal settlements
  •  Advance long-term solutions for sustainable community development

This exercise represents part of an ongoing commitment to ensuring that development within the Turks and Caicos Islands is lawful, safe, and aligned with national standards.

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What Planning Board Meeting Exposes about Housing Development in Providenciales

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Turks and Caicos, April 14, 2026 – Planning data from the March 31, 2026 Physical Planning Board meeting points to a clear and consequential trend in Providenciales: a steady rise in approvals for multi-unit residential developments, reflecting growing demand for rental housing on the island.

Applications reviewed at the meeting include apartment buildings ranging from small two-unit structures to larger developments with up to 15 units, along with extensions to existing buildings to add additional floors and living space. The pattern is consistent across multiple submissions—developers are no longer focusing primarily on single-family homes, but instead are maximizing land use to accommodate more residents per parcel.

This shift signals more than just a change in construction style; it reflects mounting pressure within the housing market. Providenciales has been experiencing sustained population growth, driven by economic opportunity, migration and labour demand, all of which are placing strain on available housing stock. As a result, rental inventory has tightened, with many residents facing limited options and rising costs.

In that context, the Planning Board’s approvals suggest that the market is responding—perhaps not through a coordinated housing policy, but through private development adapting to demand. Multi-unit dwellings, apartment complexes and building expansions are emerging as practical solutions to increase housing availability in a setting where land is finite and demand continues to climb.

At the same time, the data reveals that not all proposed developments are moving forward without delay. Several applications, including larger-scale residential projects, were deferred, indicating that regulatory review remains active and that some proposals require further scrutiny or modification before approval. This points to a balancing act between facilitating growth and maintaining planning standards.

What emerges from the meeting is a picture of an island adjusting in real time. Housing development is becoming denser, more vertical and more responsive to immediate needs, as opposed to long-term master planning.

For residents, the implications are significant. Increased rental units could help ease the current shortage, but questions remain about affordability, infrastructure capacity and whether the pace of development can keep up with demand.

In the end, the Planning Board data offers a grounded look at how Providenciales is evolving—not through announcements, but through approvals that reveal where the pressure truly lies.

Beyond housing, the meeting also revealed a mix of supporting and stalled developments shaping the wider growth picture. Among the notable approvals were a warehouse and distribution centre, pointing to expanding commercial and logistics needs, and a boat ramp in Providenciales, signalling continued investment in marine access infrastructure.

At the same time, several applications were deferred, including proposals for solar farms and larger-scale residential developments, suggesting that while demand is strong, not all projects are advancing at the same pace. The combination of approvals and deferrals highlights a development environment that is active but still navigating regulatory checks, infrastructure readiness and planning requirements.

The 786th Ordinary Meeting of the Physical Planning Board was held on March 31, 2026, in Providenciales, with participation both in person and via video conference. Acting Chairman Trent Dickenson presided over the session, joined by members Dondre Brooks and Terrell Gardiner, along with ex-officio members Dainer Lightbourne from Planning and Jamall Blair from the Department of Environment and Coastal Resources. Supporting the Board were key technical staff, including Deputy Director of Planning Toriano Williams, Assistant Director and Secretary Reginald Charles, and Land Use Planner Britney Simmons, reflecting a full complement of planning and environmental oversight at the sitting.

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

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HAITIANS FLEE HOME AS PUSH FACTORS MOUNT; LANDINGS SURGE IN TCI, AGAIN  

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Turks and Caicos, April 14, 2026 – A worsening security and humanitarian crisis in Haiti—intensifying in April alongside regional enforcement crackdowns and legal uncertainty in the United States—is driving renewed migration pressure across the Caribbean, with the Turks and Caicos Islands now experiencing a sharp spike in illegal boat landings.

Within the first 10 days of April, the United Nations has repeatedly signaled concern about Haiti. On April 1, the UN confirmed full operational support for a Gang Suppression Force, including deployment of helicopters and cross-border logistics to sustain security operations. By April 9 and April 10, the UN was again flagging Haiti for renewed attention, noting that the humanitarian situation “is not heard about enough” and preparing dedicated briefings to refocus global awareness.

These recent updates reinforce a consistent message: Haiti remains deeply unstable, with security conditions severe enough to require sustained international intervention and humanitarian access support.

At the same time, pressure is building in the United States. A legal battle over the termination of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitians—impacting more than 250,000 people—is unfolding in the courts, with key rulings and challenges playing out in late March and into April. While protections remain in place for now, the uncertainty surrounding their future is widely seen as contributing to heightened anxiety and movement decisions among Haitian nationals.

Regional reporting reinforces the urgency. Coverage from Listín Diario points to sustained deportation operations from the Dominican Republic, with tens of thousands of Haitians returned in recent months. Meanwhile, the Miami Herald continues to document Haiti’s internal collapse, where gang control, displacement and economic breakdown have left large segments of the population without safety or income.

Together, these April developments reflect what observers describe as a tightening regional environment, where Haitians are facing mounting pressure both inside and outside their country.

NEARLY 150 ILLEGALS CAUGHT IN TURKS AND CAICOS LANDINGS

That pressure is now being felt acutely in the Turks and Caicos Islands.

Between April 8 and April 12, law enforcement responded to multiple illegal migrant landings across East Caicos and Providenciales, triggering a coordinated, multi-agency response.

According to the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force, a vessel incident on April 10 near East Caicos resulted in at least 77 individuals being apprehended, including unaccompanied minors.

Subsequent operations led to additional arrests, with authorities confirming more than 70 individuals detained from that incident alone, along with further apprehensions during follow-up searches.

On April 12, another vessel landed in the Bird Rock area of Providenciales around 3:00 a.m., with 15 migrants detained and ongoing search efforts launched to locate others believed to have dispersed inland.

Authorities have activated a Critical Incident Command Structure and deployed additional personnel across multiple islands, maintaining what officials describe as a heightened operational posture.

Field reports from Eagle Legal News indicate that as many as seven to eight boats may have landed within a single week, with residents in Long Bay and surrounding communities expressing concern over repeated early-morning arrivals, abandoned vessels and migrants moving through residential areas.

A REGION UNDER STRAIN

The situation in Turks and Caicos reflects a broader regional trend emerging this month.

In The Bahamas, enforcement efforts have intensified, with increased interdictions, detentions and prosecutions as immigration becomes a central issue in the current election season.

In the Dominican Republic, deportation operations continue at scale, returning thousands of Haitians to already strained conditions.

These combined pressures are contributing to repeated migration attempts, as individuals returned to Haiti face the same insecurity, displacement and lack of opportunity that prompted their departure.

PUSH FACTORS DRIVING MOVEMENT — NOW, NOT LATER

The convergence of early April developments—from United Nations-backed security escalation and ongoing humanitarian concern, to legal uncertainty in the United States and intensified deportation activity across the region—points to a clear and immediate driver of migration.

At the same time, Haiti remains without elected leadership, governed by a fragile transitional council, with no confirmed date for national elections as insecurity continues to delay any credible path to the polls.

This combination of security collapse, humanitarian strain and political uncertainty is leaving many Haitians with few viable options at home.

This is not a projected surge.

It is a current one.

With instability in Haiti ongoing, enforcement tightening across neighbouring countries and uncertainty growing abroad, migration routes are increasingly shifting toward maritime pathways.

For Turks and Caicos, the impact is already unfolding in real time.

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

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