Bermuda CARICOM Membership Consultation Town Hall
Summary
The Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of Bermuda hosted a public town hall as part of an ongoing consultation on the Green Paper proposing Bermuda's full membership in CARICOM. Over 80 members of the public attended the panel discussion, which addressed sovereignty assurances, potential benefits including food security and disaster preparedness, and the work permit system remaining protected. The consultation invites Bermudians to weigh whether full CARICOM membership could better position the island to address shared regional challenges.
What changed
The Government of Bermuda is conducting a public consultation through April 2026 on a Green Paper proposing full membership in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). The town hall provided an open forum for attendees to ask questions and share feedback directly with Minister Lightbourne and technical officers, with panellists addressing sovereignty retention, the work permit system, immigration policy control, and potential benefits including access to regional food security initiatives, disaster preparedness through CDEMA, and greater representation in international negotiations.
While this consultation does not create immediate compliance obligations, it signals potential future policy changes that could affect Bermuda's international trade relationships, immigration procedures, and regional coordination. Bermudians are encouraged to participate in the consultation process, which will inform future Government considerations on whether moving from Associate to Full CARICOM Membership better serves Bermuda's long-term interests.
What to do next
- Read the Green Paper on CARICOM membership
- Attend upcoming CARICOM town hall meetings
- Submit feedback via the online survey or written submission
Archived snapshot
Apr 8, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Bermudians participate in CARICOM town hall as consultation process continues
08 April, 2026
The Minister of Home Affairs, the Hon. Alexa N. H. Lightbourne, JP, MP, hosted a public town hall last evening as part of the Government of Bermuda's ongoing consultation on the Green Paper proposing Bermuda's full membership in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM).
More than 80 members of the public gathered at St. Paul's Centennial Church Hall for a structured panel discussion on what full CARICOM membership could mean for Bermuda's future.
Panellists included Minister Lightbourne, MP Chris Famous, and former Attorney General and legal practitioner Phil Perinchief. The discussion was moderated by Dr. Dana Selassie.
The town hall provided an open forum for attendees to ask questions, raise concerns, and share feedback directly with the Minister and technical officers from the Ministry.
The evening's discussion drew on key content from the Green Paper, including what would remain unchanged under full membership, the potential opportunities available to Bermuda, and how public input will inform future Government considerations.
Participants received clear assurances on sovereignty and policy control. Bermuda would retain full authority over its immigration policies under full CARICOM membership, with no automatic right for CARICOM nationals to live or work in Bermuda. The work permit system and Bermuda's financial services regulatory framework would remain fully protected.
The panel also outlined the potential benefits of full membership: access to regional food security initiatives, stronger supply chain coordination, regional health cooperation, disaster preparedness through the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA), and greater representation in international negotiations where Bermuda currently has no formal seat.
The Green Paper is a consultation document. Its purpose is to invite Bermudians to weigh whether moving from Associate to Full CARICOM Membership could better position the island to address shared regional challenges, including rising food costs, workforce pressures, and climate and disaster vulnerability.
Minister Lightbourne said, "This process is about listening. Our responsibility as a Government is to ensure Bermudians have clear, factual information and a genuine opportunity to share their views, whether they support full CARICOM membership, have concerns about it, or remain undecided.
"Last evening's discussion reflected the full range of perspectives in our community, and that diversity of opinion is both healthy and necessary. Full membership is not about giving anything up or rushing toward a conclusion. It is about carefully and responsibly considering whether having a vote and a voice at regional decision-making tables better serves Bermuda's long-term interests. This Green Paper process exists so that the people of Bermuda can help shape what comes next."
The Minister thanked all attendees for their participation and encouraged continued engagement throughout the consultation period. Bermudians are invited to read the Green Paper, attend upcoming town hall meetings, complete the public survey, and submit questions and feedback online.
Further information on the consultation process is available at TogetherForCaricom.gov.bm .
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Contact Information
Ministry of Home Affairs
Government Administration Building - First Floor
30 Parliament Street
Hamilton HM 12
Bermuda
(441) 297-7590 Send us an email
Space and Satellite Services
Government Administration Building
30 Parliament Street
Hamilton HM12
Bermuda
(441) 292-4595 Send us an email
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