As the people of Grenada, Carriacou, and Petite Martinique mark the 2026 International Day of Families, the country’s Minister for Social and Community Development, Housing and Gender Affairs, Hon. Gloria Ann Thomas, has delivered a national address calling for unified reflection and urgent action to address systemic family inequalities that threaten child wellbeing across the nation.
This year’s global observance centers on the theme “Family Inequalities and Child Wellbeing”, a framing that Thomas says matches the pressing domestic priorities facing Grenada. In her remarks, she emphasized that the strength and prosperity of the entire nation are inherently rooted in the stability and wellbeing of its family units. As the foundational building block of every community, families serve as the first source of care, mentorship, and safety for children, laying the groundwork for their long-term growth and success. But Thomas made clear that this foundational role is undermined by deep, persistent inequities that shape outcomes for thousands of households across the country.
These disparities are not abstract statistics, the minister argued. Gaps in income, access to affordable housing, quality public services, and formal family support systems create unequal starting points for children and parents alike. These gaps play out in tangible, daily ways: a child showing up to school unable to focus because their basic needs have not been met, a household facing crisis without any social safety net to turn to for help. Left unaddressed, these inequities do not only harm individual families—they erode long-term child development outcomes, drag down educational attainment across the population, and put broader social stability at risk.
Thomas outlined that the Grenadian government has centered family strengthening as a core policy priority, rolling out targeted interventions to expand opportunity for marginalized households. These investments include expanded social support programs, community-led outreach initiatives, and evidence-based parenting education programmes designed to equip caregivers with the resources they need to build safe, nurturing home environments. The government remains committed to expanding these efforts, she added, noting that stable, secure housing and targeted protection for at-risk vulnerable family members are non-negotiable components of holistic family wellbeing that the state will continue to prioritize.
Crucially, the minister stressed that addressing family inequality cannot be achieved by the government alone. Meaningful, sustainable progress requires shared collective responsibility, with active engagement from local community groups, civil society organizations, the private sector, and individual households across Grenada. Urgent, clear action is needed to confront the interconnected issues that weaken family stability, including gender-based and domestic violence, child neglect, and widespread economic hardship that pushes vulnerable households into crisis. Sustainable change demands both proactive intervention for families already facing harm and long-term prevention strategies, supported by continued public investment, cross-sector coordination, and consistent, decisive policy action.
Even as she called for urgent action to address gaps, Thomas highlighted the extraordinary resilience that Grenadian families have demonstrated in the face of ongoing challenges. Countless households across the country show incredible strength, creativity, and unwavering dedication to their children, even when navigating systemic barriers and economic hardship. This inherent resilience deserves to be supported by responsive, effective public systems that meet families where they are, rather than leaving them to struggle alone.
As the country marks this International Day of Families, Thomas called on all citizens to move from reflection to tangible commitment. She urged the nation to unite around a shared goal of reducing systemic family inequality, building a more inclusive society where every family receives the support they need, and every child has the opportunity to grow and thrive.
“The well-being of our children remains the truest measure of our nation’s progress,” Thomas said. “A strong, inclusive future begins with strong families.”
She closed her address by extending gratitude to the people of Grenada and offering a blessing for the nation’s continued prosperity. This address was published by NOW Grenada, which notes that it is not responsible for the opinions and statements shared by contributing public figures.
