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Jamaica Information Service (Video)

Local Government Ministry Sets Climate-Resilient Reconstruction Agenda After Hurricane Melissa

5 min readWestmoreland
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Hurricane Melissa left damaged homes, disrupted livelihoods, and exposed weaknesses in communities across several parishes, prompting a shift in how Jamaica approaches recovery. The Ministry of Local Government and Community Development says national reconstruction must go beyond replacing what the storm destroyed and instead deliver modern, climate-resilient infrastructure capable of improving daily life for citizens.

For the 2026-2027 fiscal year, the ministry is advancing a strengthened building code requiring structures to withstand category-five hurricanes. Municipal corporations will gain stronger enforcement powers, including mandatory compliance checks and tougher penalties for illegal construction, particularly in high-risk areas. Officials recorded a sharp rise in development applications between January and March this year as Jamaicans repair and rebuild homes and businesses.

Resilience planning also covers emergency shelter. Government plans call for purpose-built facilities in at least three parishes during an initial phase, with Westmoreland, Clarendon, St. Ann, and St. Thomas under consideration. Westmoreland sites are expected to serve community needs such as netball, basketball, and town hall meetings before converting to shelter use when required. An additional $60 million will help local authorities stock existing shelters with blankets, cots, and other bedding supplies.

Preparedness measures extend to staffing and community risk reduction. Two hundred young Jamaicans will be deployed to the Social Development Commission and municipal corporations from 1 July through the hurricane season to support disaster coordinators. Drain-cleaning programmes, bulky waste removal, and Operation Calm will receive $70 million, including $300,000 per division on top of existing Disaster Relief Fund allocations. A separate $350 million road maintenance programme will fund patching and repairs islandwide.

St. Elizabeth, Manchester, and Portland will share $65 million to acquire three new water trucks, while the Jamaica Fire Brigade is slated to receive a new emergency communication centre. Social protection work includes new infirmaries in Trelawny and St. Elizabeth, plus $54 million to restore facilities in St. Elizabeth, Hanover, and Westmoreland. Indigent housing programmes will continue alongside market rehabilitation, with priority given to the Albert George, Charles Gordon, Sav-la-Mar, Musgrave, Highgate, and Black River markets. Reconstruction at the Albert George Market is budgeted at $50 million, with $70 million already spent on refurbishment works.

Syndicated from Jamaica Information Service (Video) · originally published .

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