Community pressure has forced a major policy reversal from the Belizean government, clearing the way for the long-awaited construction of the Caye Caulker Police Station to restart on the originally earmarked public parcel. The controversy ignited after a private offer was made for Parcel 815 – the plot of land reserved years ago for the new police facility – sparking widespread panic among island residents that the critical public safety project would be scrapped, and the valuable coastal property would be transferred to private ownership.
For weeks, Caye Caulker residents organized to oppose the proposal, staging public protests, gathering signatures for a formal petition led by the local Village Council, and escalating demands for the government to honor its original commitment to build the police station on the designated site. Following the sustained public backlash, Belize Rural South Area Representative Andre Perez announced on April 23, 2026 that the government would reject the unsolicited private offer and immediately restart construction on Parcel 815.
Perez clarified that the proposal to redevelop the parcel was never a finalized deal, emphasizing that the offer had only been under preliminary review when the Easter contractor break created a natural pause in the project. “We are listening to the concerns of the Caye Caulker community, and they have made clear they want the police station built on Parcel 815, where it was originally planned,” Perez stated in an interview. “As a result, we have agreed to move forward as planned, and contractor mobilization will get underway next week. I respect the will of the people of Caye Caulker, and there was never any confirmed sale, signed paperwork, or finalized negotiation for the property. It was just an unsolicited offer, and we have chosen to set it aside.”
But while the government’s reversal has been hailed as a win for community organizing, the controversy has exposed deep-rooted concerns over transparency in public land decision-making on the island. Caye Caulker Village Council Chairlady Seleny Villanueva-Pott, who led the community’s pushback, said residents remain cautious, noting that the government’s public announcement lacks clarity and the core issue of land ownership remains unresolved.
The parcel was originally donated to the Caye Caulker community by a private owner, and the Village Council is now moving forward with formal efforts to secure full legal ownership of Parcel 815 for the local government. “The community has shown incredible unity over the past two weeks, and we have made it clear we will accept nothing less than full control of Parcel 815 for the people of Caye Caulker,” Villanueva-Pott explained. “We have launched a formal petition and are still gathering signatures, and we are already in consultation with two legal teams to explore our options. If we need to pursue legal action to secure ownership, the full community stands behind this effort. We are hopeful that this announcement means Parcel 815 will be returned to the community, but we will continue our fight until that is formally finalized.”
