KINGSTON, Jamaica — Facing a growing trend of more intense extreme weather events across the Caribbean, the Jamaican government has set aside $246 million in targeted funding to carry out pre-hurricane mitigation work across the island ahead of the 2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season. The bulk of the planning and investment centers on clearing clogged drainage systems and complementary flood-reduction projects that officials say will cut potential damage when storms arrive.
In an official public statement released Tuesday, the responsible ministry outlined how the total budget will be distributed across administrative and national levels. On average, each of the island’s constituencies will receive approximately $2 million to deploy for drain clearing operations in high-risk, priority communities. This 2026 funding allocation matches the increased budget levels rolled out last year, a policy shift that boosted local parliamentary capacity to lead community-level mitigation work ahead of hurricane season, allowing for faster, more targeted action at the neighborhood level.
The remaining portion of the total $246 million budget will go to Jamaica’s National Works Agency, which will take on large-scale, specialized mitigation projects that exceed the scope of constituency-level drain clearing. These national projects include interventions in areas that require specialized technical expertise, heavy industrial construction equipment, or landscape modifications that cross local administrative boundaries.
Robert Nesta Morgan, the minister with oversight for public works, emphasized that the early, consistent funding reflects the current administration’s commitment to proactive disaster planning, practical resilience-building, and reducing the impact of storms on Jamaican communities. “We are acting before the storms come,” Morgan explained. “Last year, the Government increased the allocation to constituencies for pre-hurricane mitigation, and this year we have maintained that strengthened level of support. This will allow critical drain cleaning to continue in communities before the peak of the hurricane season.”
Morgan went on to note that Jamaica has already seen a clear increase in the intensity of rainfall events in recent years, putting unprecedented strain on existing drainage infrastructure, gullies, roads, bridges and other critical public assets. This pre-hurricane mitigation programme, he added, is just one part of a broader, government-wide resilience strategy that includes ongoing road repairs, bridge retrofitting, gully stabilization projects and improved inter-agency coordination to respond to weather events.
Under the terms of the current programme, local members of parliament will work in close consultation with municipal authorities and technical engineering teams to map out priority drainage sites and critical areas that require urgent clearing. All projects will prioritize communities that face the highest risk of flooding, repeated drain blockages, and inadequate stormwater runoff management.
While routine drain maintenance rarely draws major public attention, Morgan stressed that it is one of the most cost-effective, impactful measures the government can take to cut flood risk, protect private and public property, and limit storm damage during periods of extreme rainfall. “We cannot prevent hurricanes, but we can reduce the damage they cause by preparing properly,” he added.
Beyond government-led infrastructure work, the administration is calling on Jamaican residents to support the mitigation effort by changing harmful waste disposal habits. Officials warned that dumping of household garbage, bulky waste, construction debris and other discarded materials in drains, gullies and natural waterways remains one of the leading causes of preventable flooding during heavy downpours.
Morgan closed by reaffirming that the government will continue collaborating with parliamentarians, municipal corporations, the National Works Agency and other key stakeholders to ensure all mitigation work is targeted to the highest-need areas and completed well ahead of the 2026 hurricane season peak.
