St. James fatal crash leads CVM News lineup as Jamaica faces hurricane, health and labour concerns
A woman died and several other people were hurt Monday afternoon in a crash on the Elegant Corridor in Rose Hall, St. James, during a busy CVM News at 7 broadcast that also examined Jamaica’s hurricane readiness, public health warnings and proposed labour reforms.
Police said the collision happened sometime after 3 p.m. as a private motor car and a bus with students aboard travelled towards Trelawny. The bus reportedly left its lane, hit the woman, who was directing traffic near roadworks, and then struck a parked tractor. Superintendent Aaron Samuels of the St. James Police Division said officers were checking hospitals in Montego Bay, Falmouth and elsewhere to confirm the number of injured persons.
The programme also turned to the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season, which began June 1 and runs until November 30. ODPEM Director General Commander Alvin Gayle said the national emergency system was ready to respond, though he acknowledged that scaling up for a major event like Hurricane Melissa remained a challenge. Urban planner Professor Carol Archer questioned whether building-code enforcement, road repairs, bridges and drainage had advanced enough in affected communities.
Gayle said more Hurricane Melissa donation funds had been released after an audit found that only $26.2 million of $1.44 billion had been spent by January 2026. He pointed to ongoing roof repairs and roughly $600 million committed for foundations linked to containerised housing.
Health and environmental officials warned that Saharan dust was affecting air quality across Jamaica. NEPA said it was tracking particulate pollution with satellite support and ground monitoring, while the Health Ministry urged people, especially those with respiratory conditions, to limit exposure, wear masks outdoors and protect stored water.
Other stories included a delayed section 31D hearing in the Clansman gang trial over disclosure of photographs of deceased witness Chanice Roberts, a double murder investigation in Longwood, St. Elizabeth, and police concerns that most calls to 119 are pranks or non-emergencies.
The newscast also reported calls for Africa Day to receive stronger national recognition, a US$2.5 million donation towards Hurricane Melissa recovery, and Labour Minister Pearnel Charles Jr.’s plan for unemployment insurance through the National Insurance Scheme. The Small Biz Big Dreams segment featured Garfield Clark’s Kanga Farms and its coffee-based products, while international coverage noted Donald Trump’s comments on stalled Iran talks.
Syndicated from CVM TV News (Video) · originally published .
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