MLSS Press Release - Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Minister of Labour and Social Security in the field providing relief to
citizens affected by the devastation of hurricane Melissa.
The Ministry of Labour and Social
Security (MLSS) has intensified its national household damage assessment
operations, accelerating support to families affected by Hurricane Melissa. The
MLSS as mandated under Jamaica’s disaster management framework, leads the
national post disaster household damage assessment process.
Minister of Labour and Social Security, Hon Pearnel Charles
Jr highlighted that since
December 4, 2025, some 540
trained assessors are deployed daily using the Jamaica Household Damage, Impact
and Needs Assessment (JHDINA) platform, executed by coordinated multi-agency
teams led by MLSS staff.
Some
56,267 assessments have been completed to date, and the pace is being
accelerated.
Immediate Expansion of Assessment Teams
The Ministry has activated
deployment enhancements, including, assessors funded by the World Food
Programme (WFP), JDF National Service Corps members, MLSS officers repositioned
from Kingston and St Andrew to Mandeville, parish officers from St Mary supporting
Trelawny, parish officers from Portland reinforcing St James.
The Ministry is widening its
network, deploying additional support including career field officers through
the World Food Programme and private sector partners, officers under the Social
Inclusion Programme, partnerships with UNDP, World Central Kitchen/Peace Corps,
Ministry of Justice, UWI, and HEART/NSTA Trust.
"We are executing a maximum-deployment strategy
because the people hardest hit by Hurricane Melissa cannot wait, by
supercharging our assessment teams, we are accelerating relief to thousands of
Jamaicans, ensuring help reaches them faster, and recovery starts sooner." said
Minister Charles Jr.
Many homes
across Jamaica were destroyed by Hurricane Melissa.
Surge Plan: 600 Assessors to complete 117,000 Household Assessments
Despite strong progress, the scale of national impact far
exceeds the current field capacity of MLSS, necessitating a structured
inter-government approach, excluding MDAs that are already engaged in
substantial field operations within their respective mandates, such as the
Ministry of Health and Wellness, the Ministry of Industry,
Investment and Commerce, the
Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, and the Ministry of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Mining, to complete the estimated 150,000 household assessments
required.
This further acceleration
strategy is supported by the relevant MDAs with field capacity to complete the
remaining household damage assessments within the accelerated timeline and to
finalize the national dataset required for recovery and rehabilitation planning.
The Ministry requires 20 working
days for full execution of the four-week surge. It proposes deploying 200
three-member teams (600 assessors) across the six most severely affected
parishes to complete the remaining 117,000 household assessments within this
20-day operational window.
"This is a tightly
coordinated national operation, we are delivering consistent, real-time field
data, driving timely and targeted assistance. This integrated approach will
improve reach, consistency, and verification across all parishes. Uploading of
remaining paperbased assessments, particularly from western parishes, is
ongoing, and will finalize the national dataset, strengthening planning for
recovery and rehabilitation.” said Minister Charles Jr.
The Ministry affirms that this
nationwide operation—driven by expanded personnel, strengthened military
collaboration, and unified cross-agency coordination—marks the fastest and most
comprehensive assessment effort in Jamaica’s disaster response history.
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