ST. JOHN’S, Antigua — As debate over the updated Fatal Accidents Bill 2026 unfolded in Antigua and Barbuda’s Senate, independent Senator Jamilla Kirwan has drawn national attention to a critical unaddressed need: expanded psychological support for families grappling with the loss of loved ones to fatal incidents. While voicing her support for the modernizing legislation, Kirwan pushed lawmakers to expand their focus beyond the bill’s core focus on financial compensation, arguing that monetary relief alone cannot heal the deep, long-lasting trauma carried by bereaved families.
The 2026 Fatal Accidents Bill, designed to repeal and replace the nation’s outdated 1924 Fatal Accidents Act, establishes a contemporary legal framework for awarding compensation to families when a death results from wrongful conduct. Kirwan emphasized that the financial protections laid out in the proposed law represent an important step forward for bereaved families, but urged that the national conversation around supporting accident victims’ next of kin must include dedicated mental health resources.
“While I acknowledge that formal grief counseling falls outside the scope of this specific legislation, this debate gives us a critical chance to confront a hard truth,” Kirwan told fellow senators. “The unexpected loss of a loved one — whether a parent, partner, or child — inflicts profound, enduring psychological harm on those who are left to grieve.”
Kirwan specifically highlighted the disproportionate impact of fatal accidents on children, who are often the most vulnerable to unresolved trauma. She pointed to local incidents in Antigua and Barbuda where children have directly witnessed the death of a parent or close family member, warning that unaddressed grief can derail multiple areas of a child’s life for years to come.
“Children often do not have the tools to process this kind of profound loss on their own. Without appropriate, targeted grief support, their trauma can shape their emotional health, academic progress, and long-term personal development,” she explained. “It requires no specialized training to recognize that a firsthand experience of such violence and loss will leave lasting marks on a child’s well-being. Trauma emerges in countless unexpected forms, and navigating grief is rarely a short or simple journey.”
Beyond her call for expanded mental health access, Kirwan raised a practical economic concern about the bill’s proposed terms: the current planned maximum bereavement payment of $20,000 could erode in value over coming years due to rising inflation. Drawing from her own recent personal experience losing both of her parents, she noted that funeral and end-of-life costs have surged sharply in recent years, outpacing static compensation limits.
To address this gap, Kirwan proposed that parliament implement scheduled periodic reviews of the maximum compensation award, ensuring the payment retains its real value and aligns with shifting economic conditions. “We should build in regular consideration of adjusting this cap, so that it always reflects current economic realities and does not become outdated, just like the century-old law it is replacing,” she said.
