Jamaica’s St Thomas parish is boosting uniformed police presence along its new stretch of the Southern Coastal Highway to crack down on dangerous speeding, particularly among reckless motorcycle delivery riders, according to the division’s top law enforcement official.
Deputy Superintendent Rohan Ritchie, commanding officer of the St Thomas Police Division, announced the new enforcement measure during a regular monthly sitting of the St Thomas Municipal Corporation on Thursday. The move follows urgent public safety warnings raised by Port Morant Division Councillor Dinsdale Smith, a member of the People’s National Party, who highlighted growing community alarm over reckless operation of delivery bikes linked to local fast-food outlets.
At the center of Smith’s concerns are riders working out of the newly opened Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) location in Morant Bay’s Urban Centre. He told assembled municipal officials that local residents have grown increasingly uneasy watching riders weave erratically through congested traffic to meet delivery deadlines, warning that unchecked reckless behavior will almost certainly lead to catastrophic, fatal collisions.
“We have one of the world’s biggest food franchises newly opened here, and their delivery service is certainly efficient, but the way some of these riders use our public roads is deeply troubling,” Smith told the meeting. “I cannot understand what pushes them to ride the way they do, but I can already see catastrophic accidents on the horizon if nothing changes.”
Smith called on local police to intervene, suggesting targeted outreach and educational sessions could help riders understand how their reckless maneuvers put other road users at risk and create public nuisance. “We need to make clear that this kind of behavior cannot continue, and that fatalities are not a price we are willing to pay for fast delivery,” he added.
Ritchie acknowledged the validity of the concerns, but outlined significant operational challenges law enforcement faces when intercepting reckless motorcycle riders. Police are banned from engaging in high-speed chases, he explained, because fleeing riders often lose control and turn their bikes into dangerous weapons that can injure bystanders or other motorists. Compounding enforcement issues, Ritchie added that many of the motorcycles ridden by delivery workers carry registration plates that are not legally tied to the actual rider, making post-incident accountability difficult. Even when officers are able to catch offenders, he noted, vehicles are seized and violators are prosecuted, but the structural challenges persist.
Going forward, Ritchie said the division will pair increased visible patrols along the highway with expanded public education campaigns targeted at young motorcyclists, who make up the vast majority of delivery riders and speed-related accidents in the parish. “Data shows that most speed-related crash victims and offenders are young people, who push their bikes to the limit because they think they are invincible,” Ritchie told the chamber, drawing light laughter when he noted “At my age, I never go over 30 miles an hour.” He added that the core message of outreach will be simple: the whole point of driving is to arrive at your destination alive.
The newly completed stretch of highway that cuts through St Thomas has been a major infrastructure win for the parish, cutting travel time from Harbour View to Morant Bay from an average two hours to just 30 to 40 minutes by Ritchie’s account, smoothing out the notoriously congested route that once plagued commercial and personal travel. But better road conditions have come with an unexpected downside: they have emboldened motorists to hit dangerously high speeds, Ritchie said. Since the start of 2024, the parish has recorded four fatal collisions that left five people dead, a statistic Ritchie says demands urgent action to slow traffic down.
“We cannot overemphasize this enough: we need all motorists to slow down and take extra care on this new thoroughfare,” Ritchie said. “We are committed to doing everything in our power to curb reckless driving and prevent more preventable deaths.”
