Local News

Gonsalves Warns 2026 Estimates Signal Major Cuts, Delays and Additions 

29 January 2026
This content originally appeared on One News SVG.
An image featuring Opposition Leader Dr Ralph Gonsalves. This image was obtained from the Agency for Public Information (API).

By Val Matthias. Updated 6:10 p.m., Thursday, January 29, 2026, Atlantic Standard Time (GMT-4).

The 2026 Estimates of Revenue and Expenditure, debated in Parliament today, have drawn sharp criticism from Leader of the Opposition Dr. Ralph Gonsalves, who warned that the fiscal year will be marked by cuts to existing programmes, delays to planned projects, and selective additions of new initiatives. 

Dr. Gonsalves told the House that several flagship projects are effectively stalled or under review, declaring “Nothing will be done this year, at least.” He listed a wide range of initiatives that he said are either shelved, replaced, or facing indefinite delays. 

According to the Opposition Leader, the following programmes are affected: 

Arnos Vale New City Development
Cultural, Educational and Production Hubs – “project under review” 

Hotel at Mt. Wynne 
PRYME – replaced with a $500,000 “development bank” 

Modern Halls of Justice

Modern Parliament Project 

National Science Laboratory

Brighton Secondary School 

Lives II Live Programme

Lights at Sir Vincent Beache Stadium – Saudi funds redirected to a “master plan” consultancy 

Reconstruction of Stubbs Police Station

Fishing Development Project

Solidarity Fleet Expansion

Administrative Building in Chateaubelair

Bequia Solar PV Plant 

Rehabilitation of Kingstown Bus Terminal 

Semi-pro Netball League 

Semi-pro Football League

Jackson Bay Enhancement

Geothermal Energy Project 

National Youth Orchestra – recurrent allocation for expansion, but only $10 in capital section 

Brighton Recreational Park

Chatoyer Park

Qatar Embassy

UAE Embassy 

Saudi Embassy – recurrent allocation present, but no capital allocation 

Dr. Gonsalves argued that the government’s fiscal plan reflects uncertainty and retrenchment, with major development projects either abandoned or postponed. He warned that the lack of capital allocations for key initiatives signals a slowdown in national development and risks undermining public confidence. 

The Estimates, totalling EC$1.885 billion, will continue to be debated in the House of Assembly, with government ministers expected to defend the restructured allocations and outline their priorities for the year ahead. 

END