Hysteria on social media!

Amid a flood of noisy, partisan social media debate over the controversial construction project in Grenada’s Woodford district, the core substantive concerns raised by local residents have been sidelined and overshadowed. What should be a focused conversation over planning safeguards, environmental protections, transparent public consultation and regulatory enforcement has instead been overtaken by political point-scoring, partisan cheerleading, and off-topic commentary that avoids addressing the community’s actual grievances. Worse, many external commentators fail to distinguish between rule-abiding community members and the developer that has repeatedly violated existing regulations.

Local residents have been sounding the alarm over the erosion of their legal rights since January 2025, and the facts of the case are unambiguous. The lead contractor, Rayneau, has openly ignored two formal stop orders issued by Grenada’s Planning and Development Authority (PDA): the first was delivered in June 2024, and the second followed nine months later in March 2025. PDA representatives publicly confirmed during a February 2025 appearance on the *Beyond the Headlines* program that the agency would pursue legal action against Rayneau for its noncompliance. For reasons that have never been disclosed to the public, however, the PDA never followed through on this commitment, allowing the firm to continue two major projects: construction of a cement batching plant and land clearing for a jetty access path in Woodford Bay. All of this work proceeded without valid planning applications, official approvals, or a legally required Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA).

In a March 2025 budget address to Parliament, Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell publicly committed that no construction activity would resume in Woodford until the PDA received and approved a full ESIA. In response, consulting firm JECO Caribbean produced an Initial Environmental Study (IES), a preliminary scoping document that serves only as a stepping stone to a complete ESIA. After the IES was submitted to the PDA in July 2025, the agency never requested further work from the consultant to develop a full assessment. Instead, it improperly treated the incomplete IES as a finished ESIA – a major departure from the process the prime minister had publicly promised, with no explanation for the change.

The PDA granted conditional planning approval to Rayneau that November, tying approval to the development of an Environmental and Social Monitoring and Management Plan (ESMMP) – a critical document that outlines how the project will mitigate and monitor environmental and public health risks from the facility. Mitchell reiterated these conditions when the conditional approval was published in the Government Gazette on December 24, 2025. Notably, the prime minister’s published approval only covered an asphalt plant and the jetty; it explicitly excluded a proposed quarry, the concrete batching plant, and all other auxiliary works. This explicit limit did not slow Rayneau down, however: the firm continued advancing all unapproved projects, apparently unconcerned by the requirements laid out by both the prime minister and the PDA.

At a January 2026 press conference, the prime minister appeared to walk back his earlier commitment, indicating that a full ESIA would no longer be required. He also made no mention of the outstanding ESMMP, which as of today has still not been completed. Most recently, Rayneau has begun producing and distributing asphalt, with dozens of heavy trucks parked along both sides of the already hazardous Woodford corner. The mandatory emissions testing required to approve operations has not been completed, yet rather than ordering a shutdown until the tests are finalized, the PDA granted the company a two-week extension to allow for the arrival of overseas testing personnel.

The cumulative effect of these decisions – which systematically disregard existing law and established regulatory due process – has been cheered by a number of high-profile supporters of the ruling party. They are not merely celebrating the construction project; they are celebrating the rejection of the very procedural safeguards designed to protect local communities, while dismissing residents who speak out about their rights.

This raises a fundamental question for Grenadian democracy: Is this the model of governance the public wants? A system where citizens who, in the words of Bob Marley, “stand up for their rights” are branded as “haters” and written off as opponents of progress?

As former U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt once warned: “The liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it becomes stronger than the democratic state itself. That in its essence is fascism: ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or any controlling private power.”

The unfolding events in Woodford make clear that this decades-old warning demands serious reflection from the Grenadian public and its leaders, contributor Grenada Land Actors argues. This content reflects the views of the contributor and not NOW Grenada.