Grand Cay BPL bills wiped ahead of vote

Weeks before the Bahamas’ upcoming general election, hundreds of residents on Grand Cay in Abaco have woken up to a life-changing change: their long-accumulated electricity debt balances have been cleared entirely to zero. The sweeping debt relief comes days after Prime Minister Philip Davis made a campaign-focused visit to the hurricane-ravaged island, where he promised residents he would address their crippling billing crisis that has lingered for years.

For long-time resident Jeremy Albury, the relief wiped out $13,500 in accumulated debt that had hung over his head since Hurricane Dorian hit the region in 2019. Fellow resident Barry Albury summed up the overwhelming joy of many in the community, saying “I felt like it was Christmas in April.” Screenshots of local community group chats shared across the island show widespread celebration, with dozens of residents joking that the holiday season had arrived months early alongside the unexpected debt cancellation.

But the sudden, last-minute intervention has immediately drawn sharp questions from critics and residents alike, who question whether the policy is a pre-election tactic to sway voter turnout rather than a long-overdue fix for a systemic problem. Under the Bahamas’ Parliamentary Elections Act, providing gifts, cash or other benefits to voters with the goal of influencing their ballot choice is a criminal offense, a regulation that is expected to draw increased scrutiny in the wake of this announcement.

In an official statement defending the move, the Davis administration framed the debt cancellation as a resolution to a decades-old billing crisis sparked by overlapping disasters. The government explained that normal billing and collection operations were completely upended after Hurricane Dorian tore through Abaco, and subsequent disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic compounded the problem. During that period, residents faced widespread financial hardship, limited access to in-person banking services, and strict travel and business restrictions that made paying bills nearly impossible for many. The administration also noted that under the previous government, residents were explicitly told they would not be required to pay their accumulated balances during the emergency period, but system administrators continued to add the charges to resident accounts anyway.

After reviewing the issue, the government determined that the ballooning balances were entirely the result of circumstances outside of consumers’ control. To resolve the crisis, the state will absorb all eligible outstanding balances through an offsetting agreement with national utility provider Bahamas Power and Light, placing no financial burden on affected residents. Officials described the move as part of a broader pledge to fix unfinished problems inherited from the previous administration, rather than an election-year stunt.

This debt relief effort comes on the heels of a separate recent report from The Tribune that revealed the Bahamian government, not the ruling Progressive Liberal Party, funded more than $200,000 in gift certificates distributed to Abaco residents via local distributor Premier Importers, according to the company’s chief executive. To date, the Davis administration has not issued any formal response to those claims, with Communications Director Latrae Rahming only confirming that the prime minister would address reporters at a future, unannounced date.

Local residents confirm that the massive electricity bills first began accumulating after Hurricane Dorian destroyed much of Abaco’s infrastructure, when routine billing stopped entirely and unpaid charges compounded over the years. Some residents reported seeing total balances exceed $60,000, a sum far out of reach for most low-income households on the island. During a town hall meeting with Grand Cay residents last week, Davis acknowledged the crippling burden the debt placed on the community, promised to clear the balances and committed to delivering additional housing renovation supplies to the area.

Jeremy Albury, who has helped distribute the new housing supplies to residents, confirmed the prime minister kept his promise ahead of schedule. “So said, so done,” he said, adding that “The supplies are stuff to renovate a lot of people’s homes. More stuff coming on Wednesday.” Residents estimate the total cost of clearing all outstanding electricity bills across Grand Cay and nearby Moore’s Island exceeds $500,000.

While hundreds of eligible residents have welcomed the relief, not everyone is convinced of the policy’s good intentions. Grand Cay resident Steven Russell called the move an obvious election tactic designed to shore up support for ruling party candidates in a competitive constituency. “Everybody knows it’s a tactic because they know Cornish did not represent his constituency well,” he explained, referring to incumbent Member of Parliament Kirk Cornish. “They know that and they know which areas they are in trouble. That’s why they up in Abaco, they sharing like $200 gift certificates.”

Another local resident, Maxwell, said the last-minute relief does little to make up for years of neglect from the national government. “That can’t really do nothing after five or six years,” he said.

Grand Cay, a small island community that is home to just over 500 permanent residents, has struggled for years with substandard core infrastructure, including unreliable electricity, clean water access and telecommunications service. The constituency is widely seen as a competitive race in the upcoming general election, making any last-minute voter outreach particularly high-stakes for both major political parties.