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  • Meteorological Service Warns More Rain Coming

    Meteorological Service Warns More Rain Coming

    On July 11, 2026, the National Meteorological Service (NMS) issued an urgent Excessive Rainfall Warning for central regions of Belize, forecasting another 2 to 4 inches of rain within the next four to six hours. This new precipitation will come on top of the 4 to 6 inches of rainfall that already drenched the area earlier the same morning.

    The early downpours have already triggered destructive flash flooding across multiple communities, with Belmopan’s Las Flores neighborhood among the hardest-hit locations. In response to flood damage from the unrelenting rain, the Ministry of Infrastructure Development and Housing (MIDH) announced the complete closure of the George Price Highway at Mount Pleasant for all small vehicles.

    The government statement, released via official online channels, noted that MIDH emergency response teams have already deployed to the affected site. Personnel are currently conducting continuous monitoring of flood levels and infrastructure conditions, and will begin mitigation and recovery work as soon as conditions safely allow. Beyond the closed highway segment, MIDH has issued a broad appeal for all motorists traveling through rain-impacted zones across the country to exercise extreme caution and adjust their driving to match hazardous conditions.

    Local residents in flood-affected neighborhoods have also been advised to avoid unnecessary travel on flooded roadways. Officials emphasized that navigating flood waters present hidden dangers: water depth and submerged hazards cannot be reliably assessed from the surface, putting both drivers and pedestrians at serious risk.

    In addition to the immediate warning for central areas, a broader Excessive Rainfall Watch remains active across the entire nation. Forecasters predict an additional 2 to 4 inches of rain could fall across most of Belize over the next 12 to 18 hours, with southern regions facing the highest risk of heavy accumulation. Complementing the rainfall alerts, the NMS has also issued a Small Craft Caution for coastal waters. The advisory warns of sudden gusty winds and choppy, dangerous sea conditions in the vicinity of heavy showers and thunderstorms, and urges all small watercraft operators to avoid unnecessary voyages and maintain heightened situational awareness during the weather event.

  • OPINION: The outlook of today’s young workers: self first

    OPINION: The outlook of today’s young workers: self first

    Across global labor markets, trade unions are confronting an existential demographic crisis: plummeting membership rates among young workers have pushed the issue of youth engagement to the top of every labor organizer’s priority list. Today, the average union member is 40 years of age or older, and as veteran members retire, organized labor faces an urgent need to reverse the decades-long trend of declining youth participation to secure its long-term survival.

    Currently, the key demographic groups unions are struggling to organize are millennials and Generation Z, two cohorts that make up the vast majority of today’s young working population. For context, demographic scholars generally define Generation Z as individuals born between 1997 and 2012, who will range in age from 14 to 29 by 2026. Millennials fall between Generation X (born 1965 to 1980, currently aged 46 to 61) and Gen Z, born between 1981 and 1996, placing them in the 30 to 45 age bracket as of 2026. While definitions of “young workers” vary across sectors, many experts group all workers under 30 into this category, making it clear that this growing demographic cannot be ignored or taken for granted by organized labor.

    Young workers today have come of age during a period of unprecedented economic and cultural transformation, leading them to adopt attitudes toward work that differ sharply from previous generations. This shift has been exacerbated by broader policy trends that have actively suppressed union growth over the past half century. Many labor analysts point to the widespread adoption of neoliberal policy agendas by governments around the world as a core driver of declining worker solidarity and shrinking union density.

    One of the most visible outcomes of this policy shift is the explosive growth of the gig economy, which prioritizes flexible, short-term contract work over traditional permanent full-time positions. This new labor landscape has drastically reduced the share of jobs that are traditionally unionized, creating structural barriers to organizing young workers who rarely hold long-term positions with a single employer.

    By 2026, Gen Z workers have only ever known a labor market shaped by neoliberal norms, and most have little understanding or appreciation for the gains won by unions in past decades – such as the mid-20th century push for stable, lifelong employment with guaranteed pensions, a standard that has all but disappeared in the modern economy.

    Historically, trade unions have centered their mission on advocating for worker rights, fair wages, and workplace welfare. But today’s young workers are more educated and critical of institutional power than previous cohorts, and many have grown disillusioned with what they see as increasing political partisanship within union leadership. This perceived partisan alignment has created deep divisions both between rival unions and within individual organized labor groups, gradually eroding young workers’ trust in union leadership and discouraging them from joining.

    A further structural blow to union density has come from the steady rise in self-employment among young workers. For many young people today, the appeal of flexible work lies in the ability to take full control of their own skills and career trajectories, rather than being tied to a single employer or institution. As a result, worker loyalty is increasingly directed toward individual career advancement rather than to companies, employers, or collective labor organizations, notes Dennis De Peiza, a labor and employment relations consultant at Regional Management Services Inc.

  • Enterprise vendors fear worsening sargassum will threaten livelihoods

    Enterprise vendors fear worsening sargassum will threaten livelihoods

    One of Barbados’ most beloved coastal destinations, Enterprise Beach in Christ Church – universally known to locals and visitors as Miami Beach – is facing an escalating ecological and economic crisis driven by record levels of invasive sargassum seaweed washing onto its shores. Local vendors, whose income depends heavily on foot traffic to the beach, have warned that the worsening sargassum problem is driving away visitors at the worst possible time: the slow summer off-season, when area businesses rely almost entirely on local patronage to stay afloat.

    In interviews with Barbados TODAY, vendors issued a urgent appeal to the national government, calling for urgent action to clear accumulated seaweed from the beach, explore innovative commercial uses for the harvested sargassum, and invest in year-round programming to attract consistent visitor traffic. One long-time local vendor, who has lived in the Enterprise area for all his 42 years, described a steady deterioration of conditions that he says is unprecedented in his lifetime. “I have never seen this much seaweed in my life. It does not originate here – it breaks off from masses further out and drifts to our shores. Something has to be done, because this is going to put all of us out of business,” he said.

    While the vendor acknowledged that the government already operates a beach-clearing program to address sargassum accumulation, he noted that the dynamic nature of the tides makes consistent removal extremely challenging. Piles of seaweed pushed ashore by waves are often quickly replaced by new masses washing in with the next high tide, making large-scale clearance efforts inefficient and costly in the short term. Even so, he warned that if the problem continues to worsen year after year, it will eventually drive even repeat visitors away from the beach during the summer months, dealing a devastating blow to the local economy. He pointed to the current unintended boost the area has received from tourists displaced by hurricanes in Jamaica, noting that any advantage will be lost if visitors have no clean space to relax and swim.

    For most beach businesses, local residents are the backbone of revenue during the off-season hurricane period, the vendor explained. “If it weren’t for locals, this place would be completely shut down. Tourists do spend money, but during hurricane season, almost all of our business comes from locals, especially when the beach looks like this. We owe everything to the local community,” he said. Despite plummeting income, closing permanently or even part-time is not an option for most small vendors, who face fixed monthly costs regardless of seasonal fluctuations. “I can’t close seven days a week – if I close, I can’t pay my bills. Even if I only make $100 or $200 a day, that’s better than nothing,” he added.

    The vendor also criticized the common practice of removing beach chairs and public amenities from the coast during the off-season, arguing that it undermines efforts to promote year-round tourism. Barbados enjoys mild, attractive weather year-round, he noted, so even when visitor numbers are lower, amenities should remain available for both locals and the tourists that do visit. “They say they’re promoting tourism, but they only put chairs out from November through April. For the other six months, the chairs are locked away, and that kills business. If people can’t sit and relax, they won’t stay,” he said, calling for a rotation schedule that would keep amenities available year-round.

    To turn the beach into a sustainable year-round attraction, the vendor said policymakers need to invest in new activities to draw visitors, pointing to the decades of reduced programming that have left the once-vibrant beach quiet. “This is the most tranquil beach in Barbados – very little harassment, very little overcrowding, it’s the perfect place for relaxation. But right now, there’s nothing here to captivate people. When I was growing up, we had summer jams, volleyball tournaments, football games on the sand. Now it’s just dead. All the activity stopped,” he said. He added that restrictive local regulations around public events and noise have made it impossible for vendors to organize their own activities to draw crowds, creating unnecessary barriers to economic growth.

    Another local beach worker echoed these concerns, noting that the lack of year-round activities has not just hurt income – it has also eroded traditional local beach culture and limited employment opportunities, with most coastal workers only able to find work during the peak winter tourist season. Beyond expanding programming, he argued that the government should move beyond simply clearing sargassum and instead invest in developing a local industry that repurposes the invasive seaweed into valuable commercial products. He noted that sargassum can already be used for a range of purposes, from animal feed additive to construction material for bricks, but small local entrepreneurs face major barriers to accessing financing to launch these projects. Instead, he warned, large outside companies will likely move in, capture the economic value of the sargassum, and leave local workers with nothing to show for the loss of their beach.

  • Boat carrying tourists capsizes off Vietnam’s Phu Quoc island, killing 15

    Boat carrying tourists capsizes off Vietnam’s Phu Quoc island, killing 15

    A devastating maritime accident off the coast of Vietnam’s popular southern resort island of Phu Quoc has left at least 15 Indian tourists dead after a tourist vessel overturned in rough sea conditions on Saturday, Vietnamese online newspaper VnExpress has reported, citing official confirmation from local Vietnamese authorities.

    Of the 36 people on board the vessel when it capsized, 21 people managed to survive the incident. The passenger manifest confirms the boat was carrying 32 Indian tourists, three local crew members, and one on-board attendant, according to the report.

    In the wake of the tragedy, the Embassy of India in Vietnam announced it has activated a full emergency response protocol, dispatching support teams and setting up dedicated emergency assistance centers in both Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City to coordinate with Vietnamese authorities and provide support to family members of those affected by the incident.

    In an official statement released shortly after the accident, the Indian Embassy noted that precise details surrounding the sequence of events are still being confirmed, as search and rescue operations led by local Vietnamese authorities remain ongoing. The embassy characterized the incident as a profound tragedy.

    Local authorities outline that the boat was en route from the smaller Hon May Rut Island to An Thoi Port when it overturned approximately 400 meters, or 440 yards, off the shore in open waters. VnExpress’s reporting adds that weather conditions in the area at the time of the accident were hazardous, with rough seas and large waves buffeting small vessels in the region.

    Phu Quoc, Vietnam’s largest island, has emerged as one of the Southeast Asian nation’s top tourist draws over the past decade, with a sharp rise in international visitor numbers — including a growing stream of tourists from India — in recent years.

  • Antigua among CARICOM states Weighing Insurance Plan to Protect Hotels, Hospitals from Disasters

    Antigua among CARICOM states Weighing Insurance Plan to Protect Hotels, Hospitals from Disasters

    Against a backdrop of rapidly intensifying climate-driven extreme weather that has sent insurance premiums soaring across island nations, leaders from the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) have taken a decisive step forward by voting to develop a coordinated regional insurance and reinsurance framework. The landmark decision was reached during the 51st Regular Meeting of CARICOM’s Conference of Heads of Government, where regional policymakers prioritized closing the growing protection gap that leaves millions in critical infrastructure underinsured or entirely uninsured.

    Meeting documents from the summit highlight a pressing shared concern: more powerful and frequent hurricanes, amplified by global climate change, have driven up the cost of comprehensive catastrophe coverage to unaffordable levels for both public entities and private businesses across the bloc. Many member states have found themselves locked out of adequate coverage, leaving core sectors vulnerable to crippling financial losses when disasters strike.

    To tackle this growing risk, leaders have agreed to assess the expansion of existing regional catastrophe risk insurance programs. The proposed expansion would extend protection to tourism infrastructure—an economic backbone for most Caribbean nations—especially hotels and resort facilities that draw millions of international visitors annually. It would also cover critical social and economic assets, including hospitals that serve as first responders during public health and climate emergencies. Notably, the framework will also explore adding coverage for losses related to global pandemic events, a response to lessons learned during the COVID-19 crisis that devastated regional tourism.

    Moving forward, CARICOM will convene a dedicated Reinsurance Task Force to advance the coordinated strategy, with the core goals of expanding access to affordable coverage and strengthening the region’s overall financial resilience in the aftermath of disasters. The initiative comes as Caribbean nations, which contribute less than 1% of global greenhouse gas emissions but bear a disproportionate share of climate change’s worst impacts, continue to search for innovative, collective solutions to reduce systemic financial risk while protecting their two most vital sectors: tourism and public healthcare.

  • Global Uncertainty Could Slow Tourism and Economic Growth, ECCB Warns

    Global Uncertainty Could Slow Tourism and Economic Growth, ECCB Warns

    Against a backdrop of shifting global dynamics, the Monetary Council of the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) has sounded a cautious note on the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union’s (ECCU) economic trajectory, highlighting three major external headwinds that threaten to undermine regional expansion and tourism activity in the coming months. The official alert was published in a formal communiqué released Friday, at the conclusion of the Council’s 113th quarterly gathering hosted in Dominica, where senior finance officials from across the member nations gathered to assess the bloc’s current and projected economic health.

    In the official statement, the Council emphasized that persistent global uncertainty has cast a long shadow over the region’s growth outlook. Rising geopolitical friction around the world, wild swings in global crude oil prices, and ongoing unpredictability in international trade flows have combined to create material downside risks that cannot be ignored by regional policymakers. Against this landscape, the Council revised the bloc’s growth projection bias to the downside, warning that a further deterioration of global conditions could cool demand for Caribbean getaways and pull back the pace of overall economic expansion across the ECCU.

    Even as it flagged these external vulnerabilities, the Council struck a balanced tone, pointing to bright spots in the regional economy and ongoing efforts to build long-term stability. The body explicitly welcomed the steady flow of investment into large-scale strategic development projects and cross-regional renewable energy programs, noting that these initiatives are foundational to boosting the region’s ability to withstand external shocks and advance inclusive, sustainable development. It reaffirmed that energy security and resilience remain a top priority for accelerating shared growth, and called for urgent action to speed up the launch and full operationalization of the Caribbean Resilient Renewable Energy Infrastructure Investment Facility, a dedicated financing vehicle designed to support the region’s clean energy transition.

    Council members also reached a consensus on the need to ramp up collective regional action under the ECCB’s flagship “Big Push” development strategy. Expanding the scale and speeding up the pace of coordinated initiatives under this framework, officials agreed, is critical to lifting the ECCU’s long-term global competitiveness and insulating its economies from future external disruptions.

    Notably, the Council acknowledged that the region’s core economic engine — tourism — has continued to outperform expectations despite ongoing global headwinds. Data shared during the meeting showed that total visitor arrivals across the ECCU jumped 9% year-over-year to reach 2.5 million in the first quarter of 2026, while total visitor spending increased by 4% to hit EC$2.8 billion over the same period. The solid growth trend confirms that global traveler demand for the Eastern Caribbean as a top leisure destination remains sustained, even amid broader economic uncertainty.

  • Antigua and Barbuda Awarded to Host CARIFESTA 2029

    Antigua and Barbuda Awarded to Host CARIFESTA 2029

    At the 51st Regular Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), regional leaders have made a key decision shaping the future of the Caribbean’s most iconic cultural celebration: Antigua and Barbuda will be the official host of CARIFESTA 2029.

    The confirmation, formally released in the gathering’s closing communiqué, solidifies the twin-island nation’s role as the steward of the Caribbean’s premier festival dedicated to honoring regional arts, cultural identity, and shared heritage. In a concurrent announcement that locks in the festival’s long-term schedule, CARICOM heads also formally accepted Guyana’s bid to host the 2027 edition of the event, locking in the next two installments of the iconic regional gathering.

    Established as the Caribbean Festival of Arts, CARIFESTA serves as a unifying platform that brings together a diverse cross-section of creative talent from across the region. Artists, musicians, theatrical performers, authors, and cultural workers gather for an immersive program spanning visual art exhibitions, open-air concerts, stage productions, literary discussions, and dozens of other showcases of Caribbean creativity. Today, it stands as one of the largest and most anticipated celebrations of creative expression across the Caribbean bloc.

    While the final communiqué did not disclose specific details about Antigua and Barbuda’s proposed programming, venue plans, or budget for the 2029 festival, the early selection grants the nation a multi-year runway to develop and refine every element of the event ahead of its kickoff.

    This latest hosting win comes as Antigua and Barbuda is already deep in preparations for another high-profile international gathering: the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), scheduled to take place in November 2026. That event is projected to bring dozens of global heads of state and thousands of international delegates to the country, marking a major period of increased global attention and international event hosting for the twin-island nation in the coming years.

  • CARICOM to Put Reparations at Centre of CHOGM in Antigua

    CARICOM to Put Reparations at Centre of CHOGM in Antigua

    Caribbean community leaders have taken a decisive step to place demands for reparatory justice for centuries of transatlantic slavery and colonial exploitation at the top of the agenda for the upcoming Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), intensifying a years-long regional campaign to hold former colonial powers accountable for lasting harm. The landmark commitment was formally outlined in an official communiqué released at the conclusion of the 51st Regular Meeting of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Conference of Heads of Government, which gathered regional leaders in Saint Lucia between July 5 and 8.

    During the four-day summit, CARICOM heads formally approved the “CARICOM Ten Point Plan for Reparations: A Manifesto for the Coming Enlightenment” and threw their collective weight behind a series of coordinated initiatives designed to move the regional reparations movement forward ahead of November’s CHOGM, which will be hosted this year by Antigua and Barbuda. One of the core priorities agreed upon is building a unified, high-profile advocacy push for reparations during the Commonwealth gathering, which will bring together leaders from all member nations—including several European states that built colonial empires across the Caribbean centuries ago.

    Beyond the CHOGM advocacy effort, the regional bloc has committed to deepening its existing collaborative partnership with the African Union on reparations work. Leaders also formally pledged their support for the Third Regional Conference on Reparations, set to take place in Barbados on September 18 and 19, as well as the official unveiling of the Newton Enslaved Burial Ground Memorial, scheduled to open in Barbados alongside the November CHOGM.

    In a key show of regional solidarity, CARICOM leaders unanimously backed Jamaica’s upcoming official reparations petition to King Charles III, which Jamaican representatives will formally present in London on September 7. This petition is one of many tangible actions that fall under CARICOM’s broader goal of securing full reparatory justice from former colonial powers, pointing to the persistent intergenerational social and economic inequalities that trace their roots directly to the transatlantic slave trade and centuries of colonial rule.

    The agreement transforms the November CHOGM into a defining moment for the Caribbean reparations movement, placing host nation Antigua and Barbuda at the center of one of the most consequential diplomatic campaigns the region has pursued in modern history.

  • Bajan sprinters earn places in NACAC championship finals

    Bajan sprinters earn places in NACAC championship finals

    The opening day of the 2024 NACAC Under-18 and Under-23 Athletics Championships, hosted in Mexico, delivered mixed results for Team Barbados, with several young competitors punching their tickets to the final rounds of their events while others fell short of progression.

    Barbados’ campaign got off to a flying start thanks to Nyah Clarke in the Under-18 Girls’ 100-meter sprint. The young sprinter dominated her qualifying heat, crossing the finish line in 11.91 seconds to secure an automatic spot in the final. She went on to improve her time in the title race, clocking 11.69 seconds to claim sixth place in a talented field.

    In the Under-23 Women’s 100m, Kishawna Niles replicated Clarke’s qualifying success, taking third place in the second heat with a time of 11.59 seconds to advance. Her teammate Aniya Nurse narrowly missed out on progression, recording 11.74 seconds in the first heat that was not fast enough to move forward. Nimes went on to run 11.41 seconds in the final, finishing sixth overall in the competition.

    For the male sprinters, Jahkye Brewster delivered a strong performance to qualify for the Under-18 Boys’ 100m final, stopping the clock at 10.60 seconds to take a qualifying spot from heat one. He stepped up his pace in the final, shaving 0.10 seconds off his qualifying time to finish fourth with a 10.50 second run. In the Under-23 Men’s 100m heats, Amari Knight missed the final cut by just 0.01 seconds behind Brewster’s qualifying time, finishing with 10.61 seconds that did not secure progression.

    Moving to the 400-meter distances, Krystal Bentham suffered an early setback when she pulled up mid-race during the Under-18 Girls’ 400m preliminaries and could not finish. In the corresponding Under-18 Boys’ 400m event, however, Aidan Moore and Zacharry Wall both secured their spots in the next round. Moore claimed victory in the third heat with a time of 47.91 seconds, while Wall took second place in heat two in 47.13 seconds to advance.

    In the Under-23 Women’s 400m, both Kadia Rock and Twaneise Johnson earned places in the final. Rock topped the podium in her heat, winning heat two with a 53.25 second run, while Johnson qualified by taking fifth in heat one in 53.91 seconds. For the Under-23 Men’s 400m, Shamari Greenidge-Lewis secured qualification despite only finishing fourth in his fourth heat, crossing the line in 47.44 seconds to move forward. Brandon Hinds, by contrast, missed out on a final spot after taking fifth in heat one with a time of 48.21 seconds.

  • Central Bank Plans for Instant Cross-Border Payments Across Caribbean

    Central Bank Plans for Instant Cross-Border Payments Across Caribbean

    The Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) is moving forward with transformative plans to revolutionize cross-border electronic transactions across the Caribbean region, after its top governing body received detailed progress updates on two high-priority financial infrastructure initiatives. At the 113th gathering of the ECCB Monetary Council, held Friday in Dominica, members reviewed development milestones for both the CAPSS pilot program and the regional Fast Payment System, marking these projects as central pillars of the bank’s ambitious “Big Push” strategic agenda.

    The CARICOM Payments and Settlement System (CAPSS), the first of the two flagship projects, is designed to introduce instant cross-border payment capabilities that operate directly using participating local currencies. According to an official communiqué released following the meeting, this new framework will cut down on exorbitant transaction fees that have long burdened regional trade and personal remittances, while also reducing the region’s dependence on traditional correspondent banking relationships that have proven volatile and restrictive for many Caribbean financial institutions in recent years.

    Complementing the cross-border CAPSS project is the second initiative, a dedicated Fast Payment System built for the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU). Once fully operational, this system will enable round-the-clock real-time electronic transfers for users across the currency union, operating 24 hours a day, seven days a week to meet the growing demand for accessible, on-demand digital payments from both consumers and businesses.

    Members of the Monetary Council emphasized that both initiatives are expected to deliver far-reaching benefits beyond faster transaction speeds. By breaking down longstanding financial barriers between Caribbean nations, the projects will deepen regional financial integration, streamline payment processing efficiency, and expand access to formal financial services for under-served populations across the ECCU, advancing the bank’s goal of inclusive economic growth across the region.