ST JAMES, Jamaica — Local authorities in Jamaica’s St James parish have confirmed a major priority project for this year’s national Labour Day, tapping the flood- and storm-ravaged Rose Heights Community Centre as the parish’s flagship 2026 improvement initiative.
While Jamaica observes Labour Day annually on May 23, the national holiday will be marked on Monday, May 25 this year because the actual date falls on a weekend.
Montego Bay Mayor and Councillor Richard Vernon, who made the official announcement, shared that the selection followed weeks of careful consultations and on-site assessments of multiple community facilities across the parish. The Rose Heights site emerged as the clear top choice for several key reasons, most notably its large and consistent user base spanning the Rose Heights, Rosemount, and adjacent neighborhoods that rely on the space for regular community gatherings and events.
This year’s national Labour Day focus is centered on upgrading public spaces, with a specific emphasis on community facilities that can serve as formal emergency shelters during natural disasters — a mandate that aligns perfectly with the plan for the Rose Heights centre. The Jamaican national government has already moved forward with a policy shift to end the longstanding practice of using primary and secondary schools as emergency hurricane shelters, a change designed to cut down on disruptive closures and learning interruptions for students across the island.
“The St James Municipal Corporation is pleased to announce that the Rose Heights Community Centre will be the focus of the parish’s Labour Day this year,” Vernon shared in his statement. He noted that the facility suffered severe structural damage when Hurricane Melissa swept across the region last October, making targeted rehabilitation work a critical local need. “The intention is to ensure that it is rehabilitated with hurricane resistant capabilities,” he added. Once the upgrades are complete, the centre will be officially added to St James’ roster of approved emergency shelters, with renovations designed to bring it fully in line with national safety and infrastructure criteria for storm protection.
Beyond the flagship project, Vernon urged local residents across St James to participate in either the Rose Heights initiative or any other registered Labour Day project that aligns with their community interests, emphasizing that collective volunteer effort drives meaningful local improvement. As of the pre-holiday deadline of May 18, the St James Municipal Corporation had registered 286 independent community projects for this year’s Labour Day, ranging from park cleanups and public space beautification to the repainting of pedestrian crossings and the rehabilitation of other small community buildings.
In a separate announcement related to this year’s national observances, all preparations have been finalized for the annual floral tribute to Jamaican National Hero Samuel Sharpe, scheduled to take place as planned on the actual date of Labour Day, Saturday May 23, in Montego Bay’s Sam Sharpe Square. The ceremony, set to kick off at 8:00 a.m., marks the 194th anniversary of Sharpe’s execution by hanging in the same square in 1832, honoring his role as a leader in the movement that ended chattel slavery across the British Empire.
