Parents oppose teen boy’s ‘SURE’ Programme placement

A viral campus brawl at Doris Johnson Senior High School has sparked a heated dispute between the families of two student defendants and Bahamas’ Ministry of Education, over a controversial decision to reassign the teens to a specialized behavioural intervention program. The two 16-year-old eleventh graders, Kenaj Bain and Durell Farrington, were officially charged with disorderly fighting following the altercation that was filmed and spread widely across social media last month.

After the pair entered guilty pleas, the court handed down a sentence that included mandatory conflict resolution counselling and a set number of community service hours. Bain was also given a two-week out-of-school suspension, with both students cleared to return to their regular classes once the suspension term was completed. But when the teens arrived back on campus, they received an unexpected notification: instead of resuming their normal studies, they would be reassigned to Programme SURE for a six-month term.

Programme SURE is a Ministry of Education initiative created to support students who struggle with persistent behavioural challenges, offering instruction in a smaller, more tightly structured learning environment tailored to their specific needs. However, the mothers of both students are vehemently opposing the placement, arguing it is an unfair and inappropriate penalty that does not fit their children’s records or roles in the brawl.

Farrington’s mother, Anya Taylor, claims her son was not an active participant in the fight at all — he only stepped in to protect Bain when the altercation turned violent. She emphasized that her son has never faced disciplinary action during his time at the school, noting, “If you check his record, he never got in problems in school. I just drop him to school and pick him up. I does be there before the bell even ring so he don’t even have time to be idle.”

For Bain’s mother, nurse Kelda Forbes, the situation is even more distressing. She says her son only fought back in self-defense after he was struck with a rock by another student. Like Taylor, she insists Bain is not a problem student — teachers regularly praise his academic performance, and he is on track to graduate next year, with ambitions of becoming an orthopaedic surgeon. Last year, Bain completed the competitive Doctor’s Hospital STEM program, ranking among the top male participants in his cohort. Forbes has raised serious questions about how a six-month placement in the alternative program will derail his final year of high school, noting the term spans more than half of his grade 12 studies.

Forbes also alleges that the decision to place Bain in the program stems from a long-running strained relationship between her son and a senior school administrator, not his role in the recent brawl. She traced the tension back two years, when Bain transferred to the school from the United States while grieving the death of his father. She claims that in a 2024 incident, a school security officer struck Bain first, injuring him, but the school initially moved to suspend Bain. After the family escalated the issue to the Ministry of Education, a review cleared Bain, the officer was removed from the school, and a formal apology was issued.

Later that same year, Forbes says another unfair incident saw Bain suspended and accused of drug dealing after he picked up a small bag from the school bleachers that a female friend opened and consumed from, leading to the friend falling ill. Even after toxicology tests found no traces of drugs in Bain’s system, the suspension stood. Then, in March 2025, Bain was suspended for leaving a campus fight to seek safety in the school administrative office, charged with skipping class. Forbes adds that even in the current brawl case, Bain was initially arrested and charged, then later cleared of any involvement — yet the school still refused to readmit him until Forbes took the issue to the Ministry of Education.

Since the latest placement decision, Bain has remained at home, and his mental health has deteriorated sharply. Forbes says her son has grown increasingly depressed, has experienced significant unexplained weight loss, and often breaks down crying uncontrollably. She also claims school administrators have privately labeled Bain as a drug dealer and a “bad seed” to other parents, and she has been repeatedly denied a direct meeting with senior Ministry of Education officials to resolve the dispute.

When contacted for comment, Education Director Dominique McCartney-Russell explained that placement recommendations for Programme SURE are not made by individual school campuses, but by a centralized cross-functional team within the Ministry of Education. Principals submit referrals that include full disciplinary reports, and the team reviews each referral on an individual, case-by-case basis. While McCartney-Russell declined to comment on the specifics of Bain and Farrington’s cases, she confirmed that three students connected to the viral brawl have been recommended for the program.

McCartney-Russell outlined the official process for parents raising concerns about placement decisions, advising that families should first raise their objections with the school principal. If the issue remains unresolved after that step, parents can then escalate the complaint to the district superintendent. “We like to go up the chain because they are on the ground and they are more aware of what’s going on so you always want to start from there,” she said.