National Youth Council of Dominica elects new Executive Committee; outgoing president describes tenure as rewarding and challenging

The National Youth Council of Dominica (NYCD) has formally ushered in a new term of youth leadership, wrapping up its electoral process to seat a new 2026–2028 Executive Committee that will steer the organization’s work for the next two years.

Heading the new leadership slate is President Yannick Regis, while Jemima Mills has taken up the role of General Assembly Chairman. The full executive team includes Dylan Registe as First Vice President, Keanu Winston as Second Vice President, and Shervin Dominique stepping into the position of Communications Lead. Rounding out the elected body are Nicole Eustache, who serves as Assistant Secretary Treasurer, and two additional members at large: Dezarie Burnette and Jeanique Hypolite.

The handover of power comes as outgoing NYCD President Phael Lander delivered a reflective farewell address, looking back on his tenure as one of the most transformative periods of his life, marked by both profound rewards and significant leadership hurdles. Lander opened up about the unseen challenges of guiding the youth council, noting that every public initiative and official appearance was undergirded by unspoken hardships, from navigating stretched budgets to weathering unexpected crises that hit the organization in recent years.

Among the most severe setbacks Lander highlighted were a series of damaging incidents at NYCD headquarters: a fire on May 5 that caused extensive water damage from firefighting efforts, followed shortly by a burglary that left the organization reeling. Even with limited resources and compounded adversity, Lander emphasized that the entire council community showed remarkable resilience to keep its programs running for young Dominicans.

In his address, Lander expressed sincere gratitude to the departing executive, partner organizations, affiliated youth groups, volunteer workers, and young people across Dominica for their steadfast support through turbulent times. While he acknowledged that he left office with unmet goals that he had hoped to deliver, he stressed that every decision and effort during his tenure was rooted in a single core mission: serving the needs of the Dominican youth population.

Offering key guidance to the incoming executive team, Lander urged the new leaders to prioritize collaborative work, anchor all decisions in the NYCD constitution, avoid letting personal conflicts or individual ambition distract from the organization’s core mission, and always retain sight of their foundational purpose for entering public service. He reminded the new team that the National Youth Council as an institution far outlasts any individual leader, noting that elected officials are only temporary caretakers of the organization’s mission.

Lander closed by thanking Dominican youth for the trust they extended to him during his tenure, and for holding him accountable throughout his time in office. Even as he steps down from the presidency, Lander reaffirmed that his commitment to advancing youth development in Dominica remains unshaken. “The title may be gone, but the commitment to youth development remains. The work continues,” he said.