During a Tuesday session of the Senate of Antigua and Barbuda, Senate Majority Leader Shenella Govia laid out a comprehensive breakdown of the landmark Antigua and Barbuda Festivals Commission Bill 2026, a piece of legislation designed to transform the island nation’s approach to national festival management by establishing a formal, legally grounded, and financially independent framework for major cultural events.
For years, national celebrations such as the iconic annual Carnival and the widely popular One Nation concert have operated under less structured administrative arrangements, leading to gaps in accountability, delayed payments to vendors, and scattered lines of responsibility. The 2026 bill seeks to address these longstanding challenges by creating a dedicated, statutory corporate body: the Antigua and Barbuda Festivals Commission, which will hold independent legal standing analogous to other well-established government entities like the national Tourism Authority.
Under the proposed legislation, the newly formed commission will be granted a broad set of explicit powers to streamline every stage of festival planning and execution. These authorities include the ability to negotiate and sign contracts with performers, service providers, and suppliers; generate revenue through ticket sales, venue concessions, official branding licensing, and corporate sponsorships; hire third-party agents, consultants, and event promoters; and build collaborative partnerships with local government agencies, private sector stakeholders, and international cultural organizations. To ensure robust legal oversight, a representative from the Attorney General’s office will hold a seat on the commission’s governing board, enabling faster contract review and compliance checks. The board is mandated to hold at least one regular meeting per month, with additional sessions scheduled during peak festival planning periods to keep preparations on track.
Day-to-day operations of the commission will be overseen by an appointed Chief Executive Officer, who will be responsible for implementing board decisions, managing commissioned staff, and allocating resources. A dedicated financial controller will also be appointed to monitor all financial activity and ensure full compliance with national public finance regulations. To avoid disruptions to ongoing festival planning during the transition, Govia noted that existing public sector staff currently assigned to festival coordination may be seconded to the new commission, preserving institutional knowledge and ensuring continuity.
A central, innovative component of the bill is the creation of a dedicated Festivals Commission Fund, which will be classified as public finances but maintained as a separate, ring-fenced resource. The fund will draw revenue from three primary sources: annual parliamentary allocations, special Cabinet-approved grants for large-scale events, and independent revenue generated by the commission through sponsorships, licensing, and ticket sales. Govia emphasized that this dedicated fund is designed to reduce the commission’s reliance on the national consolidated fund, enabling faster, more flexible payments to service providers at a time when staging Carnival alone costs between $5 million and $7 million. To guarantee full financial transparency and accountability, the legislation enforces strict oversight requirements: the commission must maintain approved bank accounts with designated signatories, submit annual budgets ahead of each fiscal year, publish regular public reports on all income and expenditure, and adhere fully to the provisions of the national Finance Administration Act.
Beyond administrative and financial reforms, the bill grants the commission authority to set binding operational rules for all festivals, including mandatory safety standards for participants, vendors, and attendees. Specific regulatory powers include designating and managing parade routes, enforcing safety requirements for parade vehicles, and coordinating crowd control measures to protect public safety. The commission will also hold exclusive rights to license official festival branding, enabling it to regulate unauthorized use of official logos and generate additional revenue through official merchandising agreements. It may also impose participation fees for vendors and events, though Govia confirmed that popular subsidized programs like free children’s activities will remain accessible under the new structure.
Govia clarified that the new commission will not replace the existing Department of Culture or other established cultural bodies. Instead, the legislation clearly delineates roles and responsibilities between the new commission and existing agencies, eliminating overlap and allowing both entities to operate more effectively. The reform, she argued, will strengthen Antigua and Barbuda’s capacity to deliver world-class cultural events and reinforce the country’s standing as a top regional cultural tourism destination.
After concluding her detailed presentation, Govia formally commended the bill to the Senate for consideration. The legislation forms a core part of the Antigua and Barbuda government’s broader agenda to strengthen public governance and expand the economic footprint of the nation’s fast-growing cultural industries.
