In Hanover, Jamaica, the leader of the nation’s most influential educators’ organization is escalating a high-stakes confrontation with government authorities over the ongoing use of school campuses as long-term emergency shelters, drawing attention to shocking allegations that students have witnessed sexual activity by storm-displaced shelter residents. Dr. Mark Malabver, president of the Jamaica Teachers’ Association (JTA), used a Thursday press conference held at the Princess Grand Jamaica Resort in Green Island to deliver a firm rejection of any efforts to deflect attention from or weaken the core demand: immediate relocation of all shelter occupants out of active learning spaces. Malabver emphasized that the dispute transcends personal conflicts or partisan politics, centering instead on a non-negotiable obligation to protect the safety and well-being of students and teaching staff.
“This is not a question of bruised egos, public relations posturing, or political performance art, nor is it about the embarrassment recent disclosures have caused the Ministry of Education,” Malabver told reporters. “This is fundamentally about upholding our duty of care, addressing verified risks, and safeguarding children and educators in spaces that are meant exclusively for teaching and learning.”
Malabver first raised the alarming allegations during the opening session of the JTA’s 2026 three-day Education Conference, where he outlined the situation that has unfolded in the months following Hurricane Melissa, which struck Jamaica in October 2025. Months after the storm passed, hundreds of displaced residents remain housed in temporary shelters set up on school grounds that continue to operate for daily classes, leaving students regularly exposed to inappropriate behavior by shelter occupants. Among the most disturbing claims are multiple reports that shelter residents have engaged in sexual activity in full view of attending students.
“These conditions are profoundly unsettling, and every member of the public should be outraged that children are being exposed to this kind of conduct in a learning environment,” Malabver stated.
Following the JTA’s initial disclosure, government officials pushed back against the claims, questioning why the concerns were not raised earlier. In a statement released Wednesday, the Ministry of Education said it had never received formal notification of the allegations during its regular monthly coordination meetings with the JTA, and claimed it had no prior knowledge of the severity of the claims before the conference. The ministry added that it had launched a preliminary review of the unconfirmed allegations.
But at Thursday’s press conference, Malabver categorically refuted the ministry’s account, dismissing claims the concerns were never formally communicated as completely false. He said the JTA has submitted repeated, documented, clear concerns to relevant government bodies about the dual use of school campuses as both active learning facilities and long-term disaster shelters dating back to the immediate aftermath of the storm. Those concerns, he confirmed, were officially sent to the Ministry of Education, the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management (ODPEM), and the Ministry of Local Government.
“These were not unsubstantiated rumors. They were rooted in credible on-the-ground reports, professional assessment from our educators, and the JTA’s clear legal and ethical responsibility to act whenever the safety of children is put at risk,” Malabver said.
He went on to detail his own direct outreach to top education officials: “To be perfectly clear, I personally raised these specific concerns with Education Minister Dr. Dana Morris Dixon during a private phone conversation. Targeted issues were also brought up repeatedly in our monthly official meetings with the ministry, and formal correspondence was sent via letter.”
Malabver argued that the ministry’s attempt to avoid action by hiding behind the lack of “confirmed reports” or “formal incident filings” is not just insufficient, but recklessly dismissive of child protection obligations. “Child protection does not wait for 100% confirmation of an incident before action is taken. It starts the moment a credible concern is raised,” he emphasized.
The JTA president also voiced deep criticism of requests from top education officials for specific identifying details, including the name of the police station where reports were supposedly filed and the exact name and location of the school where the alleged incidents occurred. Malabver noted that both Education Minister Dixon and Permanent Secretary Dr. Kasan Troupe made these requests, calling the demands inappropriate, misdirected, and evidence of a fundamental misunderstanding of how sensitive child protection cases must be handled.
Malabver stressed that the JTA is not an investigative body, and it has no responsibility to reveal confidential sources or institutional details that could put the safety of students and educators at risk or compromise ongoing due process. Neither, he added, do the minister or permanent secretary hold legal authority to demand this type of sensitive information for internal administrative inquiries.
“The JTA will not release confidential information to the Ministry of Education, the permanent secretary, or the minister responsible for local government and shelter oversight. None of these offices are the legally designated investigative body for matters of this nature,” Malabver said. “We will not help disclose sensitive data to unauthorized individuals, and we will not put our educators in harm’s way under the pretense of an administrative inquiry.”
Malabver received unified public backing from the educators in attendance at the press conference. JTA President-Elect La Sonja Harrison and other senior association leaders joined him on stage to offer formal and spiritual support for his position, underscoring that the entire organization stands behind the demand to relocate shelter occupants immediately.
