Economy | Greater Belize Media https://www.greaterbelize.com GBM: Growing Together Fri, 27 Feb 2026 01:13:53 +0000 en hourly 1 https://www.greaterbelize.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/GBM-G-Logo-2-150x150.png Economy | Greater Belize Media https://www.greaterbelize.com 32 32 BTL Counters Union, Insists Severance Dispute Is Resolved https://www.greaterbelize.com/btl-counters-union-insists-severance-dispute-is-resolved/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=btl-counters-union-insists-severance-dispute-is-resolved Fri, 27 Feb 2026 01:13:53 +0000 https://www.greaterbelize.com/?p=83935 Belize Telemedia Limited is taking a strong stance, trying to put some distance between itself and the growing frustration coming from the Belize Communications Workers for Justice. The BCWJ has accused the company of dragging its feet, and acting in bad faith, on long‑standing severance […]

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Belize Telemedia Limited is taking a strong stance, trying to put some distance between itself and the growing frustration coming from the Belize Communications Workers for Justice. The BCWJ has accused the company of dragging its feet, and acting in bad faith, on long‑standing severance claims. But today, BTL countered that narrative. At a press conference, company officials said they’ve paid every cent ordered by the Caribbean Court of Justice, stressing that all court‑mandated severance payments are now fully settled. And they’re not stopping there. According to BTL, additional payouts for former employees who qualify under Section 183 of the Labour Act are already in the pipeline and will be processed. The company says it’s following the law, and it’s being transparent about it. Responding directly to remarks from the BCWJ earlier this week, BTL’s Internal Legal Counsel, Kileru Awich, explained that the severance issue has shifted significantly over the last four months. He suggested that what’s happening now is part of a more complex, evolving process, not the stonewalling the former employees claims.

 

Kileru Awich

                             Kileru Awich

Kileru Awich, Internal Legal Counsel, Belize Telemedia Limited

“You have to understand that this matter of severance has evolved significantly between November and February. There was the company’s initial position, which was that we are going to satisfy severance obligations for those who are within the 6-year limitation period. And if you are outside of the six-year limitation period, the company would not voluntarily pay any severance. Now, the six percent that was paid to those former employees who left within six years, that six was arrived at because the company at that point was not contemplating paying beyond the six-year. Now, you have to appreciate that the company’s position has changed since then, and the company is now going to pay severance payments to those former employees who left within 6 years prior. So the considerations are now very different in terms of interest, because the company has agreed to settle obligations which it has been advised are not statue barred. And then I also need to add that interest is not as of right. This interest which litigants get comes from statutory, from the Senior Courts Act, and you have to plead it. You plead it in your claim at the court, and you succeed in your claim, and the court determines your interest under that provision of the Senior Courts Act. So the company paying interest now is actually the company paying beyond what it is required to pay, because these matters have not gone to court. Only the matter of Erven Marin and his fellow litigants went to court. And that gives you full context as to why.”

 

Interest Standoff Freezes BTL–Union Negotiations

 

Negotiations between Belize Telemedia Limited and the Belize Communications Workers for Justice have stalled, as both sides dig in over whether interest should apply to outstanding severance payments. While BCWJ accuses the company of delaying and acting in bad faith, BTL insists it has already settled all court‑ordered payouts and is prepared to process additional claims under Section 183 of the Labour Act. The sticking point now is interest: the union wants terms reflecting what a court might award, but BTL argues that any settlement outside the courtroom requires give‑and‑take. According to Chief Human Resource Officer Kendra Santos, the company is willing to pay interest beginning from the November 2025 benchmark set out in the CCJ ruling, an offer BTL says goes beyond its legal obligations, given how the severance issue has evolved in recent months.

 

Kendra Santos

                    Kendra Santos

Kendra Santos, Chief Human Resource Officer, Belize Telemedia

“So if we’re both saying, we’re talking and we’re both saying we don’t want to go to court, the expectation that we will give and you will get everything that you believe you should get if you go to court cannot be the premise that we’re talking, in our view. You can’t think that you will end up getting everything that you believe you would get if you go to court. If it is that we’re talking outside of court and we want to settle, both parties have to agree to get something and to give up something. That’s the spirit in which we approach the discussions. So, your question regarding interest, we had a lot discussion around whether the interest awarded by the court, if you go to court, is applicable or not. We even conceded to the fact that it’s not that interest that’s applicable on the table, the company’s prepared to pay the interest, given that if you want to talk about cost of living adjustment or the fact that there is some premium, my words, premium, if you will, to be given on these monies because they were not paid at the time it was due. And so the company is saying, well, if it is that your argument is that you only became aware of how this severance payment really should be made once and for all, notwithstanding that you’ve asked for years outside of court, but that the CCJ judgment has clarified it for all and sundry, then a good marker to start the interest, because you say I could not have reasonably known that I needed to claim within six years of leaving, I only knew that this was supposed to be the case, November 2025. The company’s prepared to pay the interest from November 2025, benchmarking the six percent against interest that was awarded for those who actually went to court and the court in its own discretion awarded that six percent for them as part of the judgment, right?” 

 

BTL Rejects Bad‑Faith Claim as Talks Stall

 

As severance negotiations between Belize Telemedia Limited and the Belize Communications Workers for Justice remain frozen over an interest dispute, BTL is also refuting claims that it acted in bad faith. The company maintains it never walked away from the table and says it continued improving its offers even as talks grew tense. According to Chief Human Resource Officer Kendra Santos, the union’s approach at their last meeting lacked the professionalism needed for productive dialogue. BTL is now urging former employees to contact the company directly, arguing that they can still access their severance outside of BCWJ’s negotiation process.

 

Kendra Santos

                      Kendra Santos

Kendra Santos, Chief Human Resource Officer, Belize Telemedia

“I will put it mildly to say that the manner in which we were engaged this last time around, this second meeting, the tone, the spirit, the lack of professional expertise as we would want to see it, was what we were engaged with. And we recognize that for those two reasons, being so far apart, you’re trying to get the six percent and everything that comes with a court judgment, along with the approach, is not the spirit in which we can reasonably negotiate. And that is why, in our view, for those two reasons, it broke down. And why we’re here today, to tell everyone in Belize that the company wants to move forward without delay and settle with everybody in the same manner. So whether you are being represented by BCWJ, whether you write on your own to the mailbox, whether you come to an attorney, whatever it is, BTL’s board has approved that you want to pay and we want to pay in this manner and we think it’s reasonable to give the severance and interest from November 2025, when the judgment was handed down, to whenever we actually got a check for persons.”

 

Reporter

“Would you, the other side has accused you all of negotiating in bad faith.”

 

Kendra Santos

“What would be your response to that? The response to that is, we do not agree with terminologies, because we watch the news. We don’t agree with terminologies of us low-balling and in bad faith. So us, bad faith would have been if we weren’t prepared to sit at the table in the first place, if we were not making improved positions, not once did we reduce our position, not once did we withdraw from the table, not once did we get up from the table and walk away.”

 

And tonight, BTL says it’s ready to move forward, urging former employees to reach out directly as it maintains the breakdown in talks had more to do with tone and approach than any unwillingness to negotiate.

 

 

Attention readers: This online newscast is a direct transcript of our evening television broadcast. When speakers use Kriol, we have carefully rendered their words using a standard spelling system.

 

Watch the full newscast here:

 

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PSU Invites Transport Department to Negotiations https://www.greaterbelize.com/psu-invites-transport-department-to-negotiations/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=psu-invites-transport-department-to-negotiations Fri, 27 Feb 2026 01:03:04 +0000 https://www.greaterbelize.com/?p=83929 The fight over the future of Belize’s bus terminal workers is boiling over. The Public Service Union says the Ministry of Transport hit staff with an unlawful ultimatum, resign by March first or be fired, and it’s warning workers not to give up their tenure […]

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The fight over the future of Belize’s bus terminal workers is boiling over. The Public Service Union says the Ministry of Transport hit staff with an unlawful ultimatum, resign by March first or be fired, and it’s warning workers not to give up their tenure or benefits. The clash comes as government moves to privatize terminal operations, a shift the PSU says must be negotiated, not imposed. Transport C.E.O. Chester Williams denies anyone is being pushed out, but PSU President Dean Flowers insists every worker reported the same message. With tensions rising, the union says it’s helping employees navigate what it calls a high‑stakes and confusing transition.

 

Dean Flowers

                         Dean Flowers

Dean Flowers, President, Public Service Union

“As I explained to CEO Williams, it cannot be that full grown, experienced men and woman would all hear the same thing. And then communicate that what they heard, and then the ministry now say, that is not what was said. We’re not talking about one person, we’re not talking about two person. We’re not talking about three person. It cannot be that everyone across two terminals would’ve sat in a meeting and heard the same thing, which is what was communicated to us, only to find out that wasn’t said. But in any event, what’s important? What’s important regardless of whether the legal counsel and the chief transport officer would have communicated what was relayed to the union or otherwise. CEO Williams said it is four months that they’re giving them. If that is the fact, or if in fact it was forty-eight hours, that’s irrelevant. What’s important at this point in time is that we have notified the government by way of the CEO and the Ministry of Transport, that the approach that you’re taking is not in line with the established rules, practices of the public service. But what’s important is that communication has started, dialogue has started to date. However, we have not received any formal communication from either the Ministry of Finance or the Ministry of Transport as it relates to the future of these employees. What you know is what I know is what the CEO would’ve said on the news.”

 

Flowers Claims Government Steering Public Services into Private Hands

 

The battle over Belize’s bus terminal workers is widening tonight, and the Public Service Union says it’s part of something much bigger. After accusing the Ministry of Transport of pressuring officers to resign, PSU President Dean Flowers is now warning that the dispute fits into a long‑running push toward privatization, one he says threatens jobs, benefits, and eventually the cost of public services. As the union challenges what it calls an unlawful ultimatum to terminal staff, Flowers argues the government has been quietly shifting key functions out of public hands for years, and terminal management is only the latest step.

 

Dean Flowers

                   Dean Flowers

Dean Flowers, President, Public Service Union

“The Ministry of Finance pull off the same stunt with the com corporate with the companies and Corporate Affairs Registry. The Ministry of Finance is attempting to pull off the same stunt with the police tax services department. I want to take this opportunity also to point out the public officers that we’ve been saying this from a long time, as we stated in our press release, one by one, this administration in particular, and it started on that the Musa and Fonseca regime. It is them that drives this privatization of public service into private hands, and it is now continuing under Briceno, Coye, Courtenay regime. These people are hellbent in privatizing public service and we need to see this for what it is. It will come at a cost not only to the workers but to the very consumers who are not necessarily understanding these moves of privatizing public service. You all sat idly by and watch they picked off those company registry’s employees. You all sat, I will by and watch it, watch out and do it with, with Baja Farmers far back as 2000 KHMH, you all sat back and did nothing, and one by one these departments will be picked off. Will be placed in a private hands, and the next thing that I see coming might very well be the procurement of pharmaceuticals, which doesn’t happen. But with the rolling out and the pumping of public funds in the NHI, which clearly is not providing any alleviation on the public hospitals, they might very decide that they want is one pharmacy procurement unit, whereby the pharmaceutical mafias then can then control all the money. That is currently going in the Ministry of Health. This thing is serious.”

 

The PSU says the fight over terminal staff is just the latest move in a long push toward privatization, one it warns could cost workers and consumers much more in the long run.

 

Attention readers: This online newscast is a direct transcript of our evening television broadcast. When speakers use Kriol, we have carefully rendered their words using a standard spelling system.

 

Watch the full newscast here:

 

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BCA Warns of Major Action Against Ruta Maya https://www.greaterbelize.com/bca-warns-of-major-action-against-ruta-maya/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=bca-warns-of-major-action-against-ruta-maya Fri, 27 Feb 2026 00:50:34 +0000 https://www.greaterbelize.com/?p=83922 Momentum is shifting tonight within the canoeing community as the Belize Canoe Association signals a possible showdown with the organizers of the La Ruta Maya Belize River Challenge. In a social media post from BCA Vice President Elvin Penner, paddlers are being urged to turn […]

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Momentum is shifting tonight within the canoeing community as the Belize Canoe Association signals a possible showdown with the organizers of the La Ruta Maya Belize River Challenge. In a social media post from BCA Vice President Elvin Penner, paddlers are being urged to turn out this Saturday for the Boom‑to‑City Race, not just to compete, but to show unity as the association considers major actions, including a possible boycott of this year’s Ruta Maya. Penner says paddlers, sponsors, and fans have endured years of “disrespect and unfair treatment” and will meet after the race to decide how to respond to the controversial decisions made by Love FM and the race committee. On the table are serious options: demanding BCA sanctioning of the Ruta Maya, sanctions for paddlers who race without it, refusing media interviews, staging symbolic protests at the finish line, and even breaking away to create a new river race altogether. The Association will also address internal matters, including filling its treasurer post and organizing Belize’s participation in upcoming regional games. For now, the message from the BCA is that they are prepared to act, and Saturday’s race could set the pace for what happens next in one of Belize’s biggest sporting traditions.

 

Belizeans Split Over New Ruta Maya Finish

 

Debate over the new La Ruta Maya finish line has jumped off social media and onto the streets of Belize City. Today, we asked residents how they feel about ending the race at the Grand Resort instead of the Belcan Bridge. Vendors worry they’ll lose one of their biggest earning weekends. Longtime fans say the switch chips away at a tradition they’ve honored for decades. Others welcome the change, arguing it could make the finish safer and fairer for paddlers. One thing is clear; however, Belizeans care and they have plenty to say about how this move affects community spirit and livelihoods. Here’s what we heard.

 

Belize City Resident #1

                  Belize City Resident #1

Belize City Resident #1

“People weh really want see the race and done get into it like Cross Country, it turn tradition, people would to go out there, especially the ice man weh shub ih cart and go out there to sell. The small vendors that they call mom and pop. Those are the people that will suffer, because they are looking forward to the day when they can do their special hustle. So, I don’t know what is in it. You have to consult with people that are the organizers.”

 

Belize City Resident #2

                    Belize City Resident #2

Belize City Resident # 2

“One of the main problems is that I watch the race for several years and they often have problems coming into the creek because it is narrow. And some of the athletes they are so close to win, that by the time they fall out the boat, it is an advantage. So if they have the finish line where it is clear then everybody have a fair chance of winning the race. I agree with the change.”

 

Belize City Resident #3

              Belize City Resident #3

Belize City Resident #3

“I nuh really watch that like that. So, at the end of the day, if they want to change it then they can change it. I don’t have the power to change that back. So, I just leave everything and I stress pan things weh I can change you know. Anything I cant change I don’t stress on.”

 

Belize City Resident #4

                Belize City Resident #4

Belize City Resident #4

“I don’t think that is something that should have been done, because that is the route of the Mayans. That is the original route. So, they should not change it you know. This only have ten miles. I cant go up there and come back. It might shut down on me and I can’t come back home. So, I might have to watch it on TV now.”

 

Belize City Resident #4

                Belize City Resident #5

Belize City Resident #5

“Basically I think that the people have the say and the contestants that are in the competition. So I think if they don’t feel pleased about what is happening then they should voice their opinion and do something about it. I don’t really guh watch La Ruta Maya, but the city nuh agree with, so more than likely it’s something they are not please by.”

 

Belize City Resident #6

                  Belize City Resident #6

Belize City Resident #6

“Why they don’t keep on doing it they way they were doing, because all of us already use to watching it at Civic every year. So why will they change it for, why?”

 

Belize City Resident #7

“Basically they are doing it where they are making money and we poor people nuh wah make none. So they are doing it where they are making money. So it change us from making money and surviving.”

 

As public reaction grows, the finish‑line dispute has become less about location and more about fairness, tradition, and who the change really serves.

 

Attention readers: This online newscast is a direct transcript of our evening television broadcast. When speakers use Kriol, we have carefully rendered their words using a standard spelling system.

 

Watch the full newscast here:

 

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Scrapped Meeting Deepens Rift Between PSU and Government https://www.greaterbelize.com/scrapped-meeting-deepens-rift-between-psu-and-government/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=scrapped-meeting-deepens-rift-between-psu-and-government Fri, 27 Feb 2026 00:43:37 +0000 https://www.greaterbelize.com/?p=83920 The PSU–government relationship was already strained long before this week’s Transport Ministry clash. Things cracked last week when a long‑planned meeting between PSU leaders and Financial Secretary Joseph Waight was suddenly cancelled. That meeting was supposed to address major changes at the Belize Tax Service […]

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The PSU–government relationship was already strained long before this week’s Transport Ministry clash. Things cracked last week when a long‑planned meeting between PSU leaders and Financial Secretary Joseph Waight was suddenly cancelled. That meeting was supposed to address major changes at the Belize Tax Service Department and the wider public‑service overhaul. Instead, the cancellation fired up the union even more. PSU President Dean Flowers says Waight’s silence now speaks volumes. He believes the government is dodging tough questions at a time when public officers want clarity, especially with IDB‑backed reforms underway. Flowers isn’t just upset about a missed meeting; he’s questioning whether the people driving these reforms are willing to face the workers expected to carry them out. Here’s how he responded when asked about the cancellation.

 

Shane Williams

“I don’t know if there’s an update on the meeting that was canceled in terms of the Sara, but this must be frustrating for the union and for you personally as president.”

 

Dean Flowers

                      Dean Flowers

Dean Flowers, President, Public Service Union

“It’s very frustrating Shane. It’s extremely frustrating. Yesterday right before I entered very important meeting with the IDB I got, I, these calls were coming in unfortunately our visitors from the IDB did not see a calm president. There are terms when I can calm. It is just a reflection of the frustration by the Briceño administration that is hellbent on violating the rights of public officers and that is hellbent on putting public services in private hands. This is their mantra. It started under Fonseca and Musa and it now continues under like I said, Briceño, Coye, Courtenay, because those are the major players in all of this recent statutorization and privatization of public service that is occurring.”

 

Shane Williams

Is there an update on the cancel meeting for SARA?

 

Dean Flowers

“As it relates to Sara for date, we have not heard absolutely nothing from the financial secretary. As a matter of fact, I know he absented himself from the IDB MPS meeting yesterday, which focused on modernizing of the public service. I don’t know what he’s hiding from or who he’s fighting from, but at the end of the day, we have to sit around the table and I’m hoping that the. Ministry of Labor. I’m hoping that the labor commissioner will start doing her job. If the labor commissioner was doing her job, that meeting that was canceled would’ve never been canceled because she would’ve been there to, to chair that meeting if the labor commissioner was doing her job.”

 

Attention readers: This online newscast is a direct transcript of our evening television broadcast. When speakers use Kriol, we have carefully rendered their words using a standard spelling system.

 

Watch the full newscast here:

 

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Union Blasts Labour Chief Over “Unlawful Ultimatums” https://www.greaterbelize.com/union-blasts-labour-chief-over-unlawful-ultimatums/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=union-blasts-labour-chief-over-unlawful-ultimatums Fri, 27 Feb 2026 00:41:01 +0000 https://www.greaterbelize.com/?p=83918 The Public Service Union’s frustration with government isn’t easing, it’s spreading. After blasting the Transport C.E.O. and the Financial Secretary over a cancelled SARA meeting, PSU President Dean Flowers is now turning his fire toward the Labour Commissioner. He accuses her of failing to enforce […]

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The Public Service Union’s frustration with government isn’t easing, it’s spreading. After blasting the Transport C.E.O. and the Financial Secretary over a cancelled SARA meeting, PSU President Dean Flowers is now turning his fire toward the Labour Commissioner. He accuses her of failing to enforce the Labour Act and leaving terminal officers exposed to what he calls unlawful ultimatums. Flowers says proper oversight could have prevented the fallout, and he’s questioning why the union, the bargaining agent, was never brought to the table. Here’s his sharp criticism.

 

Dean Flowers

                      Dean Flowers

Dean Flowers, President, Public Service Union

“If the labor commissioner was doing her job, that meeting that was canceled would’ve never been canceled because she would’ve been there to, to chair that meeting. If the labor commissioner was doing her job these surprises that the tax officers in SARA, or in BTSD are going through, these surprises that took these officers in the Ministry of Transport; she has a duty and an obligation to ensure that workers rights and the Labor Act is respected and followed. Where is the labor commissioner in all of this? She meets with them from what the CEO informed me that they met with the labor commissioner. If they met with the labor commissioner, the Labor Commissioner then has a duty and a responsibility to ensure that they are present when these type of communication are being delivered to the workers. And the labor Commissioner has a duty and an obligation to ensure that the Ministry of Transport, the Ministry of Finance, communicate with the legal bargaining agent. What then becomes the purpose of the child, prioritized body and the Labor Advisory Board? If the Labor Commissioner will not call employers accountable to follow the law and to respect collective bargaining agreements? And this is what happens when we corrupt and pervert the recruitment processes in public service. This is exactly what happens. People assume offices that they come up that they leave a whole lot to be desired. And then when you hold them accountable and you critique constructively their poor performance, oh, it’s personal, oh, it’s political. Hell no, it’s not. It’s not. It’s holding you accountable. You ask for a job. You are given a job. Do your job, please do your job.”

 

Flowers says this latest criticism boils down to one message for the Labour Commissioner, step up, enforce the law, and protect the workers who are depending on her.

 

Attention readers: This online newscast is a direct transcript of our evening television broadcast. When speakers use Kriol, we have carefully rendered their words using a standard spelling system.

 

Watch the full newscast here:

 

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CARICOM Leaders Hold High‑Stakes Nevis Caucus https://www.greaterbelize.com/caricom-leaders-hold-high-stakes-nevis-caucus/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=caricom-leaders-hold-high-stakes-nevis-caucus Fri, 27 Feb 2026 00:32:59 +0000 https://www.greaterbelize.com/?p=83912 CARICOM leaders retreated behind closed doors today for what insiders say was one of their most consequential strategy sessions in years, an all‑day caucus on the quiet island of Nevis, far from the public statements and photo‑ops. That’s where tough integration battles were fought, where […]

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CARICOM leaders retreated behind closed doors today for what insiders say was one of their most consequential strategy sessions in years, an all‑day caucus on the quiet island of Nevis, far from the public statements and photo‑ops. That’s where tough integration battles were fought, where heads of government dropped the scripted diplomacy and confronted the region’s biggest sticking points directly. The leaders made the quick hop from St. Kitts earlier this morning, and sources told us the agenda was packed with contentious issues that demand political courage. From Basseterre, St. Kitts, here is reporter Peter Richards with the following story.

 

 

Attention readers: This online newscast is a direct transcript of our evening television broadcast. When speakers use Kriol, we have carefully rendered their words using a standard spelling system.

 

Watch the full newscast here:

 

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New Rules, Bigger Prize as ‘Belize at 45’ Competition Begins https://www.greaterbelize.com/new-rules-bigger-prize-as-belize-at-45-competition-begins/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=new-rules-bigger-prize-as-belize-at-45-competition-begins Fri, 27 Feb 2026 00:29:47 +0000 https://www.greaterbelize.com/?p=83881 Belize is gearing up for a bigger, bolder Independence celebration, and organizers say they’re already feeling the excitement as this year’s “Belize at 45” theme competition officially opens with stricter rules, a higher prize, and a call for creativity straight from the heart.   Eluide […]

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Belize is gearing up for a bigger, bolder Independence celebration, and organizers say they’re already feeling the excitement as this year’s “Belize at 45” theme competition officially opens with stricter rules, a higher prize, and a call for creativity straight from the heart.

 

Eluide Miller

                     Eluide Miller

Eluide Miller, National Celebrations Commission

“We are absolutely looking forward to the Belize at Forty-five celebrations this year. As it relates to the theme competition, as you highlighted, last week Friday, I believe February twentieth, the call went out for the Belize at Forty-five theme competition for this year. Last year, this competition saw just under four hundred submissions and the winning theme, of course, was “Belize at Forty-four: Stronger Together, Rising Forever.” The commission felt that that really captured the spirit of our nation at that time. And, of course, last year we had two winners who were the co-authors of that submission. And so, this competition is really significant for us. The criteria is very straightforward, submissions must be no more than ten words. So we like a theme or submissions that are extremely concise, straight to the point but really captures the Belizean spirit during the independence season. The other criteria is that each person has only up to three entries. So if you’re making a submission, you can make a submission, but no more than three entries or else your submissions will be disqualified. We are also prohibiting the use of AI this year, and so entries will be tested for an AI score and those who exceed a certain percentage, forty to fifty percent, will be disqualified. Of course, the deadline has been set for early April. April tenth, to be precise, end of the day on April tenth. The price is being increased to two thousand dollars this year, as opposed to one thousand dollars, which it has been for the past couple of years.”

 

Attention readers: This online newscast is a direct transcript of our evening television broadcast. When speakers use Kriol, we have carefully rendered their words using a standard spelling system.

 

Watch the full newscast here:

 

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Imports Surge Past Quarter‑Billion Dollars https://www.greaterbelize.com/imports-surge-past-quarter-billion-dollars/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=imports-surge-past-quarter-billion-dollars Thu, 26 Feb 2026 21:18:37 +0000 https://www.greaterbelize.com/?p=83862 Belize kicked off the new year with a lively trade performance. Imports reached $271 million, while exports climbed to $19.5 million, both higher than the same month last year, signalling a busy start for businesses and farmers across the country. The Statistical Institute of Belize […]

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Belize kicked off the new year with a lively trade performance. Imports reached $271 million, while exports climbed to $19.5 million, both higher than the same month last year, signalling a busy start for businesses and farmers across the country.

The Statistical Institute of Belize reported imports growing by 11.7%, an increase of about $28.5 million compared to January 2025. Machinery was the biggest driver, jumping from $61.6 million to $76.1 million as new production equipment arrived. Everyday items also added to the rise, including jerseys, tennis shoes, fertilisers, cigarettes, and even pasture grass seeds.

While most categories grew, construction materials like steel products dipped slightly, showing a slowdown in that sector.

On the export side, Belizean bananas stole the show, climbing from $6.1 million to $7.8 million. Farmers shipped more fruit abroad, earning higher revenues and giving the industry a strong start to 2026. Pepper sauces also made waves, more than doubling their sales compared to last year.

Marine products, especially lobster, slipped a little. Sugar exports also fell, showing how global demand can shift from month to month.

Europe was a major buyer, with earnings from that region more than doubling from $2.1 million to $4.9 million. The United States also increased purchases, rising from $3.5 million to $4.4 million, thanks to conch and pepper sauces. Sales to CARICOM countries fell from $4.3 million to $3.8 million, while the United Kingdom dropped from $4 million to $3.6 million due to fewer banana exports.

Sponsored by RF&G Insurance

Sponsored by RF&G Insurance

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Belizeans Feel Slightly Better About Money, But Worry About the Future https://www.greaterbelize.com/belizeans-feel-slightly-better-about-money-but-worry-about-the-future/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=belizeans-feel-slightly-better-about-money-but-worry-about-the-future Thu, 26 Feb 2026 20:48:45 +0000 https://www.greaterbelize.com/?p=83848 Belizeans started 2026 with a slight lift in confidence about the economy. The national Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) stood at 48.3 in January, up 0.9% from December 2025, according to the Statistical Institute of Belize. The increase suggests that people felt a little less pessimistic […]

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Belizeans started 2026 with a slight lift in confidence about the economy. The national Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) stood at 48.3 in January, up 0.9% from December 2025, according to the Statistical Institute of Belize.

The increase suggests that people felt a little less pessimistic about their current situation and about making big purchases, even as optimism about the future dipped slightly.

Sentiment about current economic conditions and household finances rose 3.8%, moving from 43.4 in December to 45.1 in January. This shows that more families felt their financial situation had improved compared to the previous month.

Confidence about buying big-ticket items like homes, cars, and appliances showed a small improvement. While people remained cautious, they were slightly more willing to consider major purchases.

On the other hand, optimism about the next twelve months fell 0.7%, suggesting that while people felt somewhat better about the present, they were less hopeful about the year ahead.

Confidence varied across districts. Corozal saw the biggest improvement, up 7.1%, driven by stronger expectations and present conditions. Stann Creek, however, recorded the sharpest decline, dropping 13.7%, with residents more pessimistic about buying durable goods and the future outlook.

By ethnic group, confidence rose sharply among people in the “Other” category and improved among the Maya community. Meanwhile, sentiment weakened among Mestizo/Hispanic and Garifuna consumers, who reported lower confidence than the previous month.

Sponsored by RF&G Insurance

Sponsored by RF&G Insurance

The post Belizeans Feel Slightly Better About Money, But Worry About the Future first appeared on Greater Belize Media.

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Cheaper Fuel Brings Relief as Other Costs Climb https://www.greaterbelize.com/cheaper-fuel-brings-relief-as-other-costs-climb/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=cheaper-fuel-brings-relief-as-other-costs-climb Thu, 26 Feb 2026 20:14:53 +0000 https://www.greaterbelize.com/?p=83840 Belizeans started 2026 with almost no change in the overall cost of living. The national inflation rate was 0.04% in January compared to last year, according to the Statistical Institute of Belize. In simple terms, prices stayed about the same. Groceries got a little more […]

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Belizeans started 2026 with almost no change in the overall cost of living. The national inflation rate was 0.04% in January compared to last year, according to the Statistical Institute of Belize. In simple terms, prices stayed about the same.

Groceries got a little more expensive. Fresh meats, bread, and drinks like coffee and juices all went up. Stewed pork rose the most, jumping nearly 18%.

Rent went up, and so did the price of cooking gas. A 100-pound cylinder of LPG now costs $130.63, about five dollars more than last January. Going to the doctor or buying medicine costs more, with surgery fees increasing almost 6%.

The good news came at the gas pump. Premium gasoline dropped by $1.12 per gallon, regular fell by $1.03, and diesel went down by $0.52.

Punta Gorda saw the biggest increase at 2.6%, with higher costs for food, LPG, and personal items. Orange Walk had the lowest rate at -1.9%, thanks to cheaper fuel and local produce like tomatoes, carrots, and beans.

Between December and January, prices overall fell by 0.5%, mostly because fuel got cheaper.

The post Cheaper Fuel Brings Relief as Other Costs Climb first appeared on Greater Belize Media.

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