KINGSTON, Jamaica — When Hurricane Melissa swept across Jamaica, it left behind a trail of widespread destruction that stretched the island’s recovery resources to their limit. Months later, as rebuilding work continues across affected communities, the American Friends of Jamaica (AFJ) has announced a plan to recognize three outstanding contributors to the island’s storm recovery effort at its 2026 Jamaica Charity Gala. The three honorees, who come from the non-profit and private sectors, will be celebrated for their critical work delivering life-saving aid and coordinating large-scale rebuilding projects in the wake of the disaster.
The award ceremony will take place on June 6 in Miami, where the three leaders will accept their honors before guests from South Florida’s Jamaican and philanthropic communities. The honoree list includes Michael Capponi, founder of the Global Empowerment Mission (GEM); Edward Raine, president and chief executive officer of Food For The Poor; and Norman Horne, executive chairman of Jamaica’s ARC Manufacturing Limited.
In a statement ahead of the event, AFJ Executive Director Caron Chung emphasized that the recognition goes beyond one-time disaster response: the three leaders are being honored for both their immediate, on-the-ground action and their sustained, long-term leadership that has kept recovery efforts moving forward months after the storm passed. Chung noted that the awards also shine a spotlight on the critical partnership between private sector and non-profit organizations that amplified the Jamaican government’s national recovery work, filling gaps that public resources alone could not address.
Capponi’s GEM was one of the first organizations to mobilize support after Hurricane Melissa made landfall. Leveraging prepositioned supply warehouses across the region and pre-established coordination networks with local and regional emergency agencies, the group moved more than one million pounds of emergency supplies into affected areas within the first seven days after the storm hit. By early 2026, GEM’s total shipments to Jamaica have grown to approximately four million pounds, and the organization has shifted its focus to longer-term recovery work, including installing temporary roofing for displaced households and repairing critical damaged community facilities.
Under Raine’s leadership, Food For The Poor took on a core logistical leadership role in the national response effort. The organization oversaw end-to-end management of inbound aid shipments, managed all customs clearance processes for incoming humanitarian goods, and coordinated the last-mile distribution of supplies to hard-hit communities across the island. Raine’s team committed more than US$4 million to the recovery effort, established two new regional logistics hubs in Montego Bay and Spanish Town to speed up delivery, and scaled up operations to deliver food supplies to thousands of vulnerable households every day at the height of the response. Building on this immediate work, Food For The Poor has now launched a multi-phase housing reconstruction programme to help permanently rehouse families who lost their homes in the storm.
Horne’s ARC Manufacturing filled a key gap in the relief logistics network, expanding response capacity beyond what air freight could accommodate. Working alongside AFJ and other private sector partners, ARC Manufacturing coordinated large-volume sea freight deliveries of critical supplies including food, temporary shelter materials, and clean water infrastructure that allowed relief operations to keep up with the massive need across the island.
Beyond the award ceremony, the 2026 Jamaica Charity Gala serves as one of AFJ’s primary annual fundraising events for Jamaica-focused development initiatives based in South Florida. This year’s event will feature a silent auction of donated goods and experiences, a formal dinner, and live entertainment for attendees. All proceeds from the gala will go toward supporting AFJ’s ongoing grant programmes across Jamaica, spanning key development areas including education, healthcare, and community-led economic development.
