Jason Phillips, the Democratic Labour Party candidate for St Peter, has presented a transformative development agenda targeting comprehensive infrastructure and social reforms for the northern Barbados constituency. During a recent campaign meeting, Phillips articulated a multi-faceted strategy addressing long-standing community concerns through systematic governmental intervention.
The candidate identified road rehabilitation as an immediate priority, advocating for a structured program focusing on critical corridors including Boscobel to Speightstown and Indian Ground to Speightstown. Phillips emphasized the necessity of proper paving, drainage, and lighting systems, explicitly rejecting temporary patchwork solutions. His infrastructure proposal extends to enhanced street lighting to improve road safety and reliable waste management systems featuring fixed collection schedules and community clean-up initiatives.
Water infrastructure emerged as another cornerstone of Phillips’ platform, with commitments to demand greater investment and accountability to ensure residents receive clean, reliable water. The candidate specifically addressed housing reform in Six Men’s Village, promising transparent, time-bound land regularization processes to provide legal ownership for current occupants. Additional community development initiatives for the area include establishing youth resource centers and recreational hard courts.
Healthcare transformation features prominently in the candidate’s vision, with ambitious proposals to upgrade the Maurice Byer Polyclinic to a 24/7 mini-hospital facility equipped with ambulance services, emergency departments, and multiple wards to serve northern Barbados residents. Phillips also outlined economic measures including skills training programs, apprenticeships, and private sector partnerships to boost youth employment, alongside policies aimed at reducing living costs through agricultural development and protection for low-income households.
Following his policy presentation, Phillips characterized his campaign approach as authentically engaged, stating his visibility reflects genuine connection with constituents rather than political strategy. The candidate highlighted his 26-year teaching career and legal practice as qualifications for implementing transformative representation.
