WATCH: Six charged in Mandeville highway vending clampdown

MANCHESTER, Jamaica — A coordinated law enforcement operation targeting unregulated street vending along Jamaica’s Winston Jones Highway in Mandeville concluded on Thursday with six vendors arrested and formally charged with violating the island’s Towns and Communities Act. Five additional vendors caught in the clampdown received official warnings, local law enforcement confirmed this week.

The multi-agency sweep was carried out jointly by personnel from the Manchester Municipal police force, the Area Three Agricultural Protection Branch, and the central Manchester police command. According to law enforcement officials, the enforcement action is part of a broader ongoing push to reestablish public safety and orderly movement across Mandeville and its surrounding neighborhoods.

Unregulated roadside vending has grown increasingly prevalent in recent months along the busy highway corridor, particularly near the Williamsfield and New Green roundabouts. The unchecked activity has created significant traffic disruption, slowing vehicle flow through key junctions and raising major safety concerns for both motorists and vendors themselves.

A senior anonymous police source explained the urgency of the intervention, noting that many vendors have been stepping directly onto the active lanes of the Winston Jones Highway to approach moving vehicles to sell their goods. This dangerous practice puts both vendors and drivers at severe risk of collisions, the source added.

In the wake of the operation, law enforcement is calling on all local vendors to move their operations to the officially designated Mandeville Market, where dedicated vending space is available. Police also reminded all vendors operating in the region that they are required to comply with all existing public health and workplace safety regulations to protect both vendors and customers.