A long-running public dispute over the planned new police station on the Belizean island of Caye Caulker has entered a new phase, this time centered on accusations of poor communication between local elected leaders and national representatives. As of May 7, 2026, the Caye Caulker Village Council has publicly claimed that it has received no updates on stalled construction timelines for the controversial facility, leaving local governing bodies completely in the dark about the project’s status. However, Andre Perez, the area representative for Belize Rural South, is pushing back hard against those claims, arguing that all delays stem from logistical bottlenecks rather than intentional lack of outreach.
In detailed comments responding to the council’s concerns, Perez explained that the construction halt was never a secret to local leadership. He confirmed that the project’s contractor was temporarily pulled away to complete work on a parallel police station build in the inland community of Bella Vista, and coordinating the shift of workers, heavy machinery, and construction supplies to the remote island location required significant lead time. Crucially, Perez announced that mobilization for the Caye Caulker project officially kicked off on the morning of May 7, with construction crews already on site to resume work. He dismissed the council’s complaints as overblown, emphasizing that both the council and the broader community were kept informed of the delay at every step.
The dispute also extends to a second core demand from the village council: a formal transfer of ownership for the project’s land parcel to the local governing body. Perez has confirmed that this request cannot be accommodated under the current terms of the project’s funding. The entire build is financed through a loan agreement with the Central American Bank for Economic Integration (CABEI), which requires that all infrastructure built under the program remain under the formal ownership of a Government of Belize ministry or department – in this case, the Belize Police Department. Perez noted that without adhering to this requirement, the CABEI funding would never have been approved, and the project would never have moved forward. He emphasized that the facility will permanently serve the Caye Caulker community as a police station regardless of formal ownership, and that construction is set to ramp up in earnest over the coming days. Outlets will continue to provide updates as the project progresses.
