From ruins to reopening, Tidy Tots shines again

Tidy Tots Educare, an early childhood institution in Black River, St Elizabeth, has triumphantly reopened its doors following extensive damage from Hurricane Melissa’s catastrophic passage three months prior. The Category 5 storm had obliterated the school’s roof, ceiling, windows, partitions, and furniture, rendering the facility completely inoperable and displacing its 100 students.

The school’s principal, Janet Clarke, described the profound emotional and physical devastation: ‘The wind destroyed everything. We had to engage parents immediately as we had no viable structure.’ The disaster forced numerous families to relocate from the community entirely, with student enrollment initially dropping by half at a temporary location provided by another institution.

Restoration became possible through an extraordinary collaboration initiated when parent Eleanor Muir documented the damage on social media. Her viral video captured the attention of JN Life Insurance executives Susan Holness and Othneil Blagrove, who personally visited the site. ‘When I saw what Hurricane Melissa left behind, I felt sad and wanted to see it first-hand,’ Holness stated. Blagrove, who has childhood connections to the area, emphasized the project’s personal significance.

JN Life Insurance partnered with NORTAS Engineering and Contracting Ltd, whose CEO Nichlous Stewart provided complimentary labor while JN Life supplied all construction materials. This joint effort enabled comprehensive refurbishment of the learning environment, allowing full resumption of educational activities.

The Early Childhood Commission reported widespread sectoral impact, with 466 of Jamaica’s 2,420 early childhood institutions affected by the hurricane. Executive Director Dr. Karlene DeGrasse-Deslandes noted that despite significant disruptions to 24,058 infants and 2,305 practitioners, recovery has progressed remarkably, with 99.1% of institutions now reopened—a testament to national resilience and dedicated restoration efforts.