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THE 2017 HURRICANE SHELTER LIST

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Bahamas, June 20, 2017 – All Islands

HURRICANE SHELTERS 2017

NEW PROVIDENCE

 

 

 

NO.

 

NAME OF SHELTER

 

ADDRESS

 
 

1

New Dimensions Ministries

364-0808/364-6397(Church)

 

Joe Farrington Road

 

2

Epiphany Anglican Church

364-2884 (Church)

 

Prince Charles Drive

 

 

3

 

Epworth Hall/Ebenezer Methodist Church/

393-2936/393-1763

 

 

Shirley Street

 

 

4

Holy Cross Anglican Church

393-2428 (Church)

Highbury Park off

Soldier Road

 

5

Kemp Road Ministries

393-5932/393-8872

 

Kemp Road

 

 

6

Pilgrim Baptist Church

393-3644

 

St. James Road

 

7

Salvation Army

393-2340/393-2745

 

Mackey Street

 

 

8

 

St. Mary’s Hall/

St. Augustine’s College/324-1511

 

 

Bernard Road

 

 

9

 

Agape Full Gospel Baptist Church/328-6937

 

Kennedy Subdivision

 

10

Golden Gates World Outreach Ministries/361-3347  

Carmichael Road

 

 

11

New Bethlehem Baptist Church

341-8432/3613960

 

Independence Drive

 

 

12

Southwest Cathedral

Church of God341-0356

 

Carmichael Road

 

NO.

 

NAME OF SHELTER

 

ADDRESS

 
 

13

Church of God of Prophecy

322-3241/322-3097/322-8376

 

East Street

 

14

Church of God of Prophecy

328-5930

 

Augusta & Patton Streets

 

15

Ebenezer Mission Baptist Church

322-8161

 

St. Charles Vincent Street

 

16

Salvation Army

323-5608/323-2345

 

Meadow Street

 

17

St. Barnabas Anglican Parish Church

323-5995/326-2192/323-4460

 

Wulff & Baillou Hill Road

 

 

18

 

Mt. Moriah Baptist Church

323-1747/325-6693 (Church)

 

 

Farrington Road

 

 

19

Bahamas Association for the Physically Disabled/322-2393  

Dolphin Drive

 

20

Church of God of Prophecy

327-4886

 

Gambier Village

 

21

New Providence Community Centre

327-1660

 

Blake Road

 

22

 

Calvary Haitian Baptist Church

 

West Avenue

 

 

 

 

 

23

 

 

Hillview Seventh Day Adventist

Church

361-8683

 

 

 

 

Harold Road

 

 

 

 

24

All Saints Anglican Church

392-7220

 

Joan’s Height, South Beach

 

 

25

C. R. Walker Senior High School

Auditorium/326-2001/326-1323

 

Baillou Hill Road

 

NO.

 

NAME OF SHELTER

 

ADDRESS

SHELTER
 

26

St. John’s Native Baptist Church

323-5434

 

Meeting Street

 

 

THE FAMILY ISLANDS 

 

DistrictNorth Andros District

 

No NAME OF SHELTER ADDRESSS
1.  

Nicholls Town Primary School

 

Nicholls Town

2. Church of Christ Nicholls Town
3. Church of God of Prophecy Conch Sound
4. Pleasant View Assemblies of God South Mastic Point
5. First Baptist Church San Andros
6. B. A. Newton Primary Red Bays
7.

 

 

Administration Building

(COMMAND CENTRE)

 

 

 

Nicholl’s Town

 

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING

 2O17

DistrictCentral Andros District

 

No NAME OF SHELTER ADDRESSS
1.  

Church of God

 

Cargill Creek

2.  

Pentecostal Church

 

Bowen Sound

3.  

Catholic Church

 

Fresh Creek

4. Voice of Deliverance  

Calabash Bay

5. Mount Sinai Baptist Church  

Calabash Bay

6. Mount Ethel Baptist Church  

Love Hill

7. New Highway Pentecostal Church  

Blanket Sound

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O17

 

DistrictBerry Islands District

 

No NAME OF SHELTER ADDRESSS
1.  

Church of God of

Prophecy

 

Great Harbour Cay

 

DistrictSouth Andros District

 

No NAME OF SHELTER ADDRESSS
1. Deep Creek Primary School Deep Creek
2. High Rock Primary School The Bluff
3. Long Bay Cays Pre-School Long Bay Cay
4. St. Paul’s Baptist Church Black Point

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O17

 

DistrictMangrove Cay District

 

No NAME OF SHELTER ADDRESSS
1. Mangrove Cay High School Swains
2. Burnt Rock Primary Burnt Rock

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O17

 

DistrictCrooked Island/Long Cay

 

No NAME OF SHELTER ADDRESSS
1. Ezekiel Thompson Hall Cabbage Hill, Crooked Island
2. Church of God of Prophecy Cripple Hill,

Crooked Island

3. Deleveaux’s Residence Major’s Cay,

Crooked Island

4. Collie’s Duplex Albert Town,

Long Cay

5. Command Centre & Additional Shelter

 

Ulric H. Ferugson Primary

Cabbage Hill,

Crooked Island


DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O17

 

DistrictCat Island District        

 

No NAME OF SHELTER
1. St. Andrews Anglican Church
2. Holy Redeemer Catholic Church
3. Zion Baptist church
4. St. Marks Anglican Church
5. Seventh Day Adventist Church
6. Lovely Zion Baptist Church  

 

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O17

 

DistrictNorth Eleuthera District

 

No NAME OF SHELTER
1. Purplemae Restaurant
2. Wesley Methodist Church
3. Trinity City of Praise Centre
4. Mission Church of God
5. Peoples Haitian Baptist Church
6. John Wesley Methodist Church

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O16

 

DistrictNorth Eleuthera District (Harbour Island)

 

No NAME OF SHELTER ADDRESSS
1. Lighthouse Church of God Harbour Island
2. Wesley Methodist Church Harbour Island

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O17

 

DistrictSouth Eleuthera District         

 

No NAME OF SHELTER
1. Rock Sound Primary School
2. Green Castle Primary School
3. Wemyss Bight Primary School
4. Deep Creek Middle School
5. Bannerman Town & John Miller’s Community Library

 

 


DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O17

 

DistrictCurrent, Current Island & Spanish Wells

 

No NAME OF SHELTER
1. The Current Community Centre
2. Zion Methodist Church

 

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING

 2O17

 

DistrictCentral Eleuthera District

 

No NAME OF SHELTER
1. The Resource Centre
2. The Salvation Army
3. Church of the Nazarene
4. Governor’s Harbour Primary School
5. Camp Symonette
6. St. Mark’s Native Baptist Church
7. Cambridge Villas

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O17

 

DistrictSan Salvador & Rum Cay        

 

No NAME OF SHELTER
1. Zion Baptist church
2. St. James Baptist Church
3. St. John’s Baptist Church
4. Gerace Reasearch Centre
5. Zion Baptist Church
6. St. Christopher’s Anglican Church  

 

DistrictMayaguana District     

 

No NAME OF SHELTER
1. Abraham’s Bay High School
2. Pirates Well Primary School

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O17

 

DistrictInagua District

 

No NAME OF SHELTER
1. Zion Baptist Church
2. St. Michael’s Methodist Church
3. St. Phillip’s Community Centre

 

DistrictRagged Island District

 

No NAME OF SHELTER
1. Administration Building

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O17

 

DistrictExuma District

 

No NAME OF SHELTER ADDRESSS
1. St. Mary Magdalene Anglican Church  
2. St. Peter’s Union Baptist Church  
3. St. Matthew’s Baptist Church  
4. Mt. Carmel Baptist Church  
5. St. Andrew’s Community Centre  
6. St. Theresa’s Catholic Centre  
7.

 

College of the Bahamas Resource Centre  
8. The New Mt. Hermon Baptist church  
9. Palestine Baptist Church  
10. Ebenezer Baptist Church  
11. St. Margaret’s Anglican Church  
12 Ebenezer Baptist Church Rolleville
13 Mt. Sinai Union Baptist Church Stuart Manor
14 Ebenezer Baptist Church Barratarre
16 St. Luke’s Baptist Church Black Point
17. Mt. Oliveth Baptist Church Staniel Cay

 

DESIGNATED HURRICANE SHELTER LISTING 2O17

 

DistrictLong Island District

 

No NAME OF SHELTER
1. Seymour’s Gospel Chapel
2. Highway Church of God
3. St. Joseph’s Anglican Church
4. First Assemblies of God
5. Senior’s Recreational Centre
6. Community Centre
7. St. John’s Anglican Church Hall
8. Holy Cross Anglican Church
9. Holy Family Anglican Church
10. The Church of the Ascension

 

HURRICANE SHELTER LIST FOR GRAND BAHAMA

CITY OF FREEPORT

 

1 – Foster B Pestaina Centre

Pro-Cathedral of Christ the King (Special Needs Shelter)

East Atlantic Drive and Pioneers Way

352-5255

 

2 – First Baptist Church Hall

Columbus Drive & Nansen Avenue

352-9224

 

3 – Central Church of God Hall

Coral Road

373-5355

 

4 – Jack Hayward High School

Wildcat Avenue & Pioneers Way East

373-8750

 

5 – Maurice Moore Primary School

Sandcombe Drive

373-7981/2

 

6 – St George’s High School Gym

Sunset Highway/Off East Beach Drive

352-7373

 

7 – Cancer Association

West Atlantic Drive

352-2873

 

WEST END GRAND BAHAMA DISTRICT

Eight Mile Rock High School Gym

Martin Town, Eight Mile Rock

348-3782

 

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Africa

Bahamas’ Ghana Teacher Plan Draws Fire as Both Nations Face Shortages

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By Deandrea Hamilton | Editor

NASSAU, Bahamas (July 14, 2026) — The Bahamas Government says it needs the 300 teachers being sourced from Ghana to help close a critical staffing gap, even as criticism mounts over unresolved employment matters reportedly affecting approximately 2,000 Bahamas Union of Teachers members and as Ghana itself struggles with a massive shortage in the profession.

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Education, Science and Technology Chester Cooper said the shortage has been worsened by retirements, expiring contracts and the expansion of specialized subjects, including special education, technology, financial literacy, digital literacy and entrepreneurship.

Cooper said the Government has established a multi-agency task force and is attempting to attract recently retired teachers, new graduates and educators who previously left the profession.

“In keeping with government policy, Bahamians will be given first priority to fill all vacancies,” Cooper said.

However, the optics surrounding the decision are sketchy at best, with the BUT pressing the Government to settle long-standing matters affecting its members while Ghana grapples with a teacher shortage estimated at no fewer than 50,000 educators.

Ghana’s Minister of Education, Haruna Iddrisu, recently disclosed that the country needs between 50,000 and 90,000 additional teachers to adequately staff its schools.

UNICEF’s 2026 Teachers for All: Ghana report confirms that Ghana is not only experiencing an overall teacher shortage but also serious inequalities in how available teachers are distributed. It found that rural and underserved schools are particularly affected, while Ghana’s primary teacher workforce fell by more than 25 percent—from 131,094 in 2019–2020 to 93,818 in 2022–2023—as student enrolment increased.

The report stated:

“Not only is there a teacher shortage in Ghana, but inefficiencies also exist in the current distribution of available teachers.”

That finding raises questions about why a country with such a significant domestic deficit is prepared to facilitate the overseas recruitment of hundreds of educators.

Meanwhile, BUT President Belinda Wilson has argued that the Bahamian Government has substantial unfinished business with the teachers already serving in the public system.

According to Wilson, approximately 2,000 educators are awaiting the conclusion of salary negotiations, while hundreds reportedly have unresolved matters involving confirmations, salary reassessments, promotions, rental allowances, examination marking fees, disturbance allowances, hardship payments and coaching allowances.

The union has also complained that it was not properly consulted before the proposed recruitment became public and has demanded details about the qualifications, subjects, deployment locations and employment conditions being considered for the Ghanaian teachers.

The debate is also unfolding as the University of The Bahamas has produced approximately 219 education graduates over the past three years—76 in 2024, more than 60 in 2025 and 73 in 2026.

Cooper maintains that overseas recruitment is intended only to fill positions that cannot immediately be occupied by qualified Bahamians.

“For decades, we have benefitted from strategic international recruitment of educators from partner nations,” he said. “We emphasize that such recruitment is intended only to address vacancies that cannot be immediately filled by qualified Bahamians.”

Still, the questions remain: why are outstanding matters affecting thousands of Bahamian teachers unresolved, and why is The Bahamas sourcing educators from a country that acknowledges it is tens of thousands of teachers short itself?

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Bahamas News

Prime Minister Commissions Completed Rooftop Solar Installations at UB

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Prime Minister Commissions Completed Rooftop Solar Installations at UB, July 3, 2026

By Lindsay Thompson

Bahamas Information Services


NASSAU, The Bahamas – Prime Minister the Hon. Philip Davis participated in ceremonies commissioning Completed Rooftop Solar Installations at the University of The Bahamas, a move towards energy sustainability.

Prime Minister Philip Davis

“Today, we turn a new page on how we power our lives, how we protect our environment, and how we define Bahamian leadership in the 21st century.

Energy is foundational to national development,” the prime minister said.

The ceremony commissioning installation completion, under the Reconstruction with Resilience in the Energy Sector in The Bahamas (RRESB) programme, was held on Friday, July 3, 2026 at Courtyard Choices, University of The Bahamas.

“With this commissioning, the University of The Bahamas takes its place at the vanguard of our energy transition. You are setting an example and proving your commitment to stewardship – leaving our islands better than we found them,” the prime minister said.

He said it was good to mark the commissioning: “The country has turned a new page on how we power our lives, how we protect our environment, and how we define Bahamian leadership in the 21st century,” he said.

The prime minister regarded energy as fundamental to national development, and added, “It determines how effectively we educate our children, how reliably we deliver healthcare, and how competitive our businesses can be.”  So, today is about solar panels, yes.  But it is also about how we power this country and what that means for the future we are building together. This is why programmes like RRESB matter.”

He said that it reflects his administration’s commitment to strengthening the systems that underscore daily life in the country, while building a country that is more sustainable and more energy-secure.

“We live on the frontlines of a changing climate.

“We have felt the fury of the winds and the rising of the tides. We know, better than most, that the old ways of generating power – reliant on volatile oil and fragile, centralized grids are no longer enough to guarantee our safety.

“This is why this administration will continue to strengthen our critical infrastructure and improve the resilience of our energy sector.

“As Prime Minister, I see these investments as investments in our future. They will serve our country for many years to come – while reflecting a broader shift in how we think about development.

Minister of Energy, Utilities and Aviation JoBeth Coleby-Davis

The Prime Minister said: “Sustainability is no longer separate from growth – it is essential to it.”

He extended sincere appreciation to Mr. Ruiz, Head of Cooperation at the Delegation of the European Union to Jamaica, Belize, The Bahamas, The Turks and Caicos Islands and the Cayman Islands, and to Mr. Fache, Program Manager with the European Union Delegation, for their partnership.

And, he commended partners at the Inter-American Development Bank, the University of the Bahamas, the Project Execution Unit, AnO Technologies, the Hon. Jobeth Coleby-Davis and the Ministry of Energy, Utilities and Aviation for their dedication and expertise in implementing this program.

“Today’s achievement reflects what can be accomplished when we work together in pursuit of a stronger Bahamas.

“This is the work of nation-building. It is not accomplished in a single day or in a single project. It is steady work – consistent and purposeful.”

 

(BIS Photos/Kristaan Ingraham)

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Bahamas News

Diamond Stubbs, 17 • Betrica Brown, 19 • Stania Webb, 19 • Fourth victim yet to be identified

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Deandrea Hamilton | Editor

Six road deaths in two days leave a nation searching for answers

NASSAU, The Bahamas – A nation that only days ago celebrated graduations, scholarships and bright futures is now united in grief as six lives were lost on Bahamian roads in just two days, including four young women whose deaths have shaken the country to its core.

The names Diamond Stubbs, 17; Betrica Brown, 19; and Stania Webb, 19 have become the heartbreaking symbol of one of the country’s deadliest road tragedies in recent memory. A fourth young woman, believed to be 18 years old, had not been publicly identified by authorities up to publication time, as families continued to mourn and await official confirmation.

The four were among eight occupants travelling in a gray Mazda when it crashed into a tree on Shirley Street shortly after 1 a.m. Sunday. Police said the 19-year-old driver reportedly struck a pothole, looked back toward his passengers and lost control before the vehicle slammed into the tree. Three young women died at the scene, while a fourth later succumbed to her injuries in hospital. Four others, including the driver, remain hospitalized as investigations continue.

The tragedy’s impact reached the House of Assembly on Monday, where Members observed a moment of silence – led by Prime Minister Philip Davis – in honour of the young women whose lives were cut tragically short.

What has resonated most across the country is not simply how they died, but who they were.

Diamond Stubbs had just graduated from Old Bight High School in Cat Island as valedictorian and head girl. She was preparing to attend Langston University in Oklahoma on scholarship and was remembered by her father as an exceptional student who earned virtually every academic award presented at graduation while inspiring other young people to pursue their dreams.

Betrica Brown, who called both Cat Island and Abaco her homes, had recently travelled to Nassau to secure her student visa. Youth and Sports Minister Mario Bowleg said she was preparing to begin college on a volleyball scholarship.

Stania Webb had already distinguished herself at Langston University, where she earned both President’s List and Honour Roll recognition after graduating from Old Bight High School at just 16 years old. Family members remembered her as a quiet, ambitious young woman deeply committed to her Christian faith and education.

Speaking in Parliament, Prime Minister Philip Davis described the loss as heartbreaking, extending condolences to the families, classmates and loved ones whose lives have been forever changed. He urged Bahamians to keep those still hospitalized and the grieving families in their prayers. Similar expressions of sympathy came from across the political divide, churches, schools and communities throughout the country.

Some residents were also chided for sharing gruesome and graphic photos and video in the hours following the shocking car crash.  Relatives said it made a difficult, heartbreaking time more unbearable.

Condolences poured in from government and Christian ministers; The Bahamas Union of Teachers; The Bahamas Christian council and other leaders from across the islands.

The national tragedy extended beyond New Providence. Also on Sunday, 26-year-old Nica Julien lost her life in a separate traffic collision in Grand Bahama. Then, on Monday, a road traffic accident claimed the life of a 30-year-old man on the highway of Abaco.

Together, the six deaths have transformed what should have been a season of celebration with graduations and independence festivities in play, into one of national mourning, leaving families, communities and an entire country searching for answers—and praying that no more names are added to the list.

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