Tue | Oct 21, 2025

Growth & Jobs | Rotary Club of Kingston East & Port Royal prepares St Thomas youth for jobs

Published:Tuesday | October 21, 2025 | 12:05 AM
 Immediate Past President of the Rotary Club of Kingston East & Port Royal Melissa Anderson (second left, front row) and Andrea Livingstone-Prince (second right), cohort chair and member of the club with trainers from TPDCo and TeenHub.
Immediate Past President of the Rotary Club of Kingston East & Port Royal Melissa Anderson (second left, front row) and Andrea Livingstone-Prince (second right), cohort chair and member of the club with trainers from TPDCo and TeenHub.

IN RESPONSE to the urgent need for more skilled workers to fill jobs that have and will be created by the rapid economic and community development, the Rotary Club of Kingston East & Port Royal is currently preparing young people of St Thomas for the workforce.

The project known as the St Thomas Tourism Skills Ready Project will see dozens of the youth of St Thomas acquiring skills primarily for the tourism sector. The project is funded through a global grant from the Rotary International Foundation and is supported by international partners, the Rotary Club of Taipei Northeast, Taiwan.

Through a strategic partnership with the HEART/NSTA Trust, the training includes administrative assistant and housekeeping, while the trainees also received financial literacy and customer care coaching from subject matter experts in the club. The project falls under the Rotary-focussed area of community economic development which is about creating sustainable solutions to poverty and improving the livelihoods of communities.

Working in partnership with TeenHub, the Ministry of Labour and Social Security Special Employment Unit and the Tourism Product Development Company Limited (TPDCo), the club recently completed a cohort of training with the youth to successfully attain Team Jamaica certification. Those young people were trained for employment as tour guides, customer care representatives and front line roles in the hospitality sector.

“In partnership with the Rotary Club of Kingston East & Port Royal, this Team Jamaica programme executed for this cohort, was well received based on feedback from the participants. One of the most highlighted and energy filled day was the cultural awareness session where the group shared in activities that reignited memories of their childhood days,” said representatives Kamille McNeil and Ruth Harris of TPDCo.

Rory Morgan of TeenHub noted that: “The Rotary Club has great community initiatives that positively impact the lives of both participants and facilitators. The programmes offered by the Rotary Club of Kingston East & Port Royal attract positive individuals and the design of the cohorts and the presentation of the overall information are user-friendly, making them easy to understand for all involved.”

To date, 45 community members have been trained in four cohorts between May and October.

According to president, Roy Reynolds of the Rotary Club of Kingston East & Port Royal: “There is a gap in St Thomas between the current workforce skills and competencies and what is needed for the success of organisations in the hospitality industry. We are bridging that skills gap and giving the community members an opportunity to be competitive in the labour market.”

The club is working closely with the Ministry of Labour and Social Security’s Special Employment Unit to facilitate job placements in the relevant areas of training.

The training programme is the brainchild of immediate past president of the Rotary Club of Kingston East & Port Royal, Melissa Anderson, who is of the view that St Thomas has historically been underserved in workforce development opportunities. However, she said, as the parish begins to be positioned for growth through investment projects, the training programme was introduced to offer new economic opportunities for residents.

“After conducting an impact assessment and meeting members of the community, it was clear that there is so much untapped potential in the people and it was not that they lacked the aspiration, but rather access to opportunities,” Anderson said.