Shastri Boodan
Freelance Contributor
Central Trinidad will no longer be sidelined or ignored, declared Minister of Housing and Caroni Central MP David Lee, as he delivered a forceful address at the Couva Chamber of Industry and Commerce’s annual Christmas and Awards Function. The event was held on Friday at the Chamber’s administrative complex on Camden Road, Couva.
Lee said Central Trinidad had served as the economic backbone of the country for decades, yet had been treated “like a spare part.”
“Your industries carried this nation when others faltered. Your manufacturing saved foreign exchange when reserves collapsed. Your exports kept the dollar stable when everything else shook. Your employers held families together when national systems were failing,” he said. “And what did Central receive? Flooding, neglect, stagnant infrastructure, inadequate investment, slow approvals and a seat outside the room while others made decisions about Central.”
He stressed that the era of exploiting Central’s productivity while overlooking its development needs was “over permanently”.
According to Lee, Couva and Point Lisas were not merely contributors to the national economy, but its foundation.
“They are the backbone. The anchor. The driving force behind Trinidad and Tobago’s economic survival,” he said, adding that without Central’s output, manufacturing would collapse, energy downstream operations would fall apart, exports would shrink, foreign exchange would dry up, and thousands would lose their jobs.
He said the next major economic boom “will be built in Central, or it will not be built at all,” and vowed that the Government would stand “firmly, aggressively, unapologetically” with the region.
“When Central rises, the Republic rises. When business grows, the nation grows. And when we say a Golden Future is coming — we mean it. This Government will never again allow Central to be treated as invisible.”
Lee outlined several key initiatives under the Government’s National Revitalisation Blueprint, which he described as “development by bulldozer, by crane, by investment, by negotiation, by execution not by presentations or theoretical plans”.
The Blueprint includes:
The San Fernando–Mayaro Highway
Waterfront redevelopment in both Port of Spain and San Fernando
Port expansions at Galeota and Port of Spain
A new Justice Centre at Tamana
A world-class tourism and marina development on Carrera Island
Major industrial and commercial renewal projects
And the flagship initiative: a 250-acre transformation of Golden Grove into a modern township
He said the projects are expected to generate 50,000 jobs and billions in economic activity, describing the programme as the largest national development stimulus in two decades.
“This is not incrementalism. This is economic shock therapy — strategically delivered,” Lee said.
He affirmed that the Government was “pro-business,” committed to decisive action and immediate results.
“Not committees. Not conversations. Not excuses,” he added.
CCIC President Deoraj Mahase said that in 2025 the business community had concerns about crime, the shortage of foreign exchange, and shipping and logistics issues relating to the clearing of cargo. He said the CCIC recognises the efforts being made by the Government to address these matters. “We look forward to positive developments in 2026 and beyond.”
Mahase added that the CCIC welcomed the Government’s thrust into the non-energy sector and the recent removal of tariffs on agricultural exports to the United States. He said the Chamber was also looking forward to infrastructural development in the fence-line communities around the Point Lisas area.
