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Minimum wage rises to $17,000 from July 1 as police probe St James shooting and cyberbullying arrests

89 min readSt. James
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Jamaica's national minimum wage will move from $16,000 to $17,000 for a 40-hour work week starting July 1, Labour and Social Security Minister Pearnel Charles Jr. said after formally tabling the 2026 amendment orders for debate. The standard hourly rate rises from $400 to $425, while time-and-a-half pay increases from $600 to $637.50 per hour. Prime Minister Dr. Andrew Holness announced the change during his 2026–2027 budget presentation, marking the fifth straight increase in recent years. Opposition members argued the $1,000 lift still falls short of what workers face in today's economy and pressed for clarity on security-guard benefits and wider sector coverage.

In St. James, the Independent Commission of Investigations is examining a police shooting in Salt Spring reportedly captured on an officer's body-worn camera. Residents said a man believed to be mentally ill was armed with a knife, throwing bottles and threatening people before officers arrived. Police said repeated orders to drop the weapon were ignored, attempts to involve community mental-health personnel failed, and the man advanced on an officer before he was shot, disarmed and taken to hospital. His condition was not known. Principal Director of National Integrity Action Dr. Gavin Myers said accountability tools such as body cameras are vital for transparency in use-of-force cases.

Three high school students were taken into custody after a months-long cyberbullying campaign in Montego Bay, St. James, where fabricated social-media pages carried a student's name and AI-generated images on Instagram and TikTok from October 2025. A parent said fresh posts appeared on Father's Day, including inappropriate pictures involving the student and her father, after earlier reports to the school and police.

Director of Cyber Investigations and Risk Management at the Major Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Agency, Dr. Patrick Linton, said public-education efforts on phishing, business email compromise and online bullying will expand as digital crime grows. MOCA has worked with schools, communities and law enforcement and says greater awareness has helped reduce successful attacks.

On the culture front, entertainer MPG will host a free "bira band" celebration on July 31 at Brooks Park in Mandeville from 6:00 p.m., featuring Midnight Band and Redemption Band on the eve of Emancipation Day, with a Kingston staging planned around Heroes Weekend. The Book Fair Festival 2026, themed "Lost in Wonderland," runs July 3–5 at the UWI Regional Headquarters from 10:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., while the National Housing Trust will hold Home It expos on July 3 at Harmony Beach Park in Montego Bay and July 11 at Emancipation Park in Kingston.

Syndicated from CVM TV (Video) · originally published .

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