Jamaica’s hurricane recovery efforts received substantial reinforcement Sunday as 72 specialized utility vehicles arrived at Freeport in Montego Bay to bolster the Jamaica Public Service Company’s (JPS) grid restoration operations. The shipment included critical equipment such as bucket trucks, diggers, pole trailers, and pickup trucks destined for deployment with recently arrived Holland Power Services crews.
According to a Monday news release from JPS, these assets will be primarily allocated to Westmoreland and other severely impacted regions in western Jamaica where Category 5 Hurricane Melissa inflicted catastrophic damage to electrical infrastructure on October 28, 2025. This delivery brings the total number of specialized vehicles imported since the hurricane to approximately 160 units.
Detommie Fuller, JPS Manager for Business Continuity Resiliency and Contract Management, emphasized that the additional fleet will ensure newly arrived linemen are fully equipped to collaborate with Jamaican, Caribbean, and international crews. Their mission: restore power to the remaining 12% of JPS customers still without electricity.
The engagement of Holland Power Services represents part of JPS’s proactive business continuity strategy initiated in February 2025 before hurricane season. Another firm, Tempest, was similarly contracted, with team members arriving days before Melissa’s landfall to enable immediate response once government authorization was granted.
Following the revelation of the hurricane’s unprecedented devastation, JPS expanded its contractor lineup to include Greystone. Both Greystone and Holland crews have received logistical support from the Jamaican government to accelerate recovery operations through additional personnel deployments.
