Planning for Sustainability in Belizean Waters 

This morning, the Coastal Zone Management Authority and Institute hosted its second Belize Sustainable Ocean Plan Geo-Spatial workshop. This three-day event gathers stakeholders to discuss priority ocean protection areas using specific data collection tools. It is a continuation of the Multi-sector Marine Spatial Planning Workshop hosted in 2024. News Five’s Britey Gordon has more details on the event.

 

Britney Gordon, Reporting

Belize’s ocean space is crucial for the survival of many sectors, including tourism, fishing, and conservation. Protecting these shared waters is essential. Today, the Coastal Zone Management Authority and Institute started a geospatial workshop to help stakeholders identify priority areas for protection and understand how ocean space is used.

 

                Samir Rosado

Samir Rosado, MSP Lead, CZMAI

“The purpose of the workshop is to look at the use and application of two decision support tools that we’re using in our MSP development process. The two tools that we’re looking at are namely Sea Sketch and Marxan. Now Sea Sketch is more of a data collection tool as well as a planning tool so it’s multifaceted. Sea Sketch is what we’re utilizing to capture information from the general public, from users of our ocean space to figure out exactly where our priority areas are for the various usages.”

 

The team wants to make sure that areas used for recreation and religious activities are included in the data collection, so people aren’t displaced. Data collection tools are crucial for this. At the workshop, there’s a team from the University of California, Santa Barbara, who developed the Sea Sketch Application. Senior Fellow Will McClintock explains how it works.

 

                      Will McClintock

Will McClintock, National Center for Ecological Analysis & Synthesis, UC Santa Barbara

“It’s a tool that allows users who can be non-technical users, average stakeholders with no real expertise in, in mapping to map their values in terms of what areas in the ocean they value and how they use it, and then what areas they would like to protect and protected areas or biodiversity protection zones. So my team is here to teach folks how to use this tool and ultimately design biodiversity protection zones that are meeting science and policy guidelines for ecosystem protection while minimizing the displacement of users of ocean space.”

 

Sea Sketch is accessible to anyone with internet access and lets users add data to a map, showing popular areas and their uses. Another tool at the workshop is Marxan, which helps with marine spatial planning. Kate Longley-Wood, Marine Spatial Planning Science Manager at The Nature Conservancy, explains that the team is figuring out how to integrate the collected data into their technical tools.

 

                   Kate Longley-Wood

 Kate Longley-Wood, Marines Spatial Planning Science Manager, T.N.C.

“Marxan is a tool that lets users put in information about priorities for conservation. So Marxan can let users say, okay, I want a marine protected area network that represents. It’s thirty percent of coral reefs and maybe also integrates other stakeholder concerns, like avoiding areas that might have high levels of conflict or high levels of cost. And so this program is really good at taking really complex criteria and turning it into outputs that people can then understand and comment on. And so it’s a really great process that is used for Marie spatial planning processes around the world.”

 

Marxan can be used to provide potential solutions to complex conservation questions, such as where a country should place a marine protected area. It also works alongside tools such as Sea Sketch to generate input data results. Rosado explains that by continuing work such as this, Belize is on its way to meeting the thirty percent ocean space as biodiversity protection zone goal.

 

Samir Rosado

“That thirty percent goal is tied to two milestones that are time-bound deliverables under the blue bond agreement. Recently in November fourth of last year, we met the milestone four goal, which is to designate twenty-five percent of Belize’s ocean space as a biodiversity protection zone. So that was met in November of last year. So we are currently at twenty point zero five percent of our ocean space designated the remainder of the timeframe, or I should say the next milestone is due for November fourth of next year. And so we are working towards identifying and designating the remaining up to forty percent.”

 

Britney Gordon For News Five.

 

Stop Order Given to Cayo Rosario Development

Less than a week after News Five aired concerns from San Pedro residents about the Cayo Rosario development, the Ministry of Infrastructure Development and Housing (M.I.D.H.) has issued a stop order to halt construction. On Friday, M.I.D.H. informed Daniel Kalenov, a director with the Cayo Rosario Development Group, about the stop order after a site visit on April ninth revealed that several buildings, including an entrance pier, were built without the necessary permits. In a letter to Kalenov, Derick Calles, Director of Building Control at the Central Building Authority, stated that the order will remain in effect until all required permits are obtained from the Central Building Authority and other relevant authorities for all structures and construction activities on the site. On April eighth, a public meeting in San Pedro saw dozens of residents, business owners, and environmental organizations voicing their opposition to the controversial development, which plans to build up to forty over-water structures in the Hol Chan Marine Reserve. Residents are particularly concerned about the piles driven into the sea to support a pier and an over-the-water concrete structure. The model currently in place represents what the other thirty-nine structures would entail. Citizens argue that interfering with the seabed to drive so many piles will permanently drive away the numerous types of fish that feed in the immediate area. Cayo Rosario is a six-acre island located about six miles west of San Pedro Town.

Placencia Tour Encounters Whale Shark in Gladden Spit Reserve

A group of tourists in the Gladden Spit Reserve had an unforgettable experience. Over the weekend, the Sea Horse Dive Shop in Placencia took them to the reserve, where they came face-to-face with a whale shark, the largest fish in the world. Whale shark sightings are common in the reserve this time of year, as they are drawn by the seasonal spawning of snappers and groupers. Only licensed tour guides can enter the whale shark zone, and getting too close to the animal is prohibited. We spoke with Elizabeth Muschamp, Executive Director at the Southern Environmental Association, about the organization’s work in the Gladden Spit Reserve.

 

On the Phone: Elizabeth Muschamp, Executive Director, SEA

“I am aware but I am not surprised. Gladden Spit is a marine reserve that has three different zones and one of those zones is the conservation zone or what we know as our spawning aggregation site. This is one of the reason why Gladden Spit was designated as a marine reserve, for the protection of the spawning aggregation site because it is one of the site that has a significant multi-species fish spawning, snappers and groupers, different species that spawn in the area. So we monitor from June every year, but locally it is know that from March to June, the snappers are spawning more that groupers and that time the whale sharks will come. So they are seasonal and known to be sighted between March and June, sometimes all the way up to July. SO they are known to drawn to spawning event. The tour operators are aware that they are not suppose to come in contact with the shark. If you listen to one of the videos I saw you can clearly hear the tour operator saying to not touch. So they are aware, which is why it is very important that only operators who are licensed can operate in the zone because they know and understand what we are trying to protect. So, they will abide by the rules.”

Cycling Federation Working to Improve Female Participation

While the Cycling Federation of Belize has addressed these pressing concerns, there’s a bigger conversation happening about the future of female cyclists in Belize. With only ten registered female cyclists in the country, the federation is working to boost that number in the coming years. One of their strategies is to provide bikes for junior riders who are serious about both cycling and their studies. Here’s more from the federation.

 

                    Glenn Flowers

Glenn Flowers, President, Cycling Federation of Belize

“We are trying to see how we can best enhance the female cycling for the next year. Presently we have about ten or so bikes that we are trying to get the females to come on board and start riding. The bikes are only to be given to females that are attending school and what to participate in the classics.”

 

      Leticia Westby

Leticia Westby, Secretary General, Cycling Federation of Belize

“Our goal is to try to partner with the Ministry of Sports to get them to support us and through primary and high school to integrate cycling as a sport in similar fashion to basketball and volleyball, football competition, to incorporate cycling. This is one of the sport that has been around for ninety-seven years and we are heading to an hundred and it is not integrated in schools. It is one of the more demanding sport that keeps kids engaged.”

 

Kaya Cattouse Lashes Out at CFB, Federation Responds

Former Women’s Cross-Country Champion Kaya Cattouse was a no-show for the thirty-fourth race on Sunday. She was expected to compete, but a few days before the race, she raised concerns that might have led to her withdrawal. On Facebook, Cattouse claimed that the Cycling Federation approved junior women riders to race on Sunday, not to support their development, but to meet a sponsorship quota. She argued that the federation was taking the easy way out by putting these young riders in a competition that’s not suitable for their age, instead of doing the hard work to develop female cyclists. The federation responded, saying the decision had nothing to do with sponsorship. We spoke with President Glenn Flowers and General Secretary Leticia Westby.

 

                        Glenn Flowers

Glenn Flowers, President, Cycling Federation of Belize

“There is a lot of challenges coming towards it and we made a decision. We contacted the CCU  and our counterparts outside. We asked the question and they said it is ok as long as we monitor it and have a timeframe that you can cut off. Clearly it speaks for itself that the kids are ready and they did well.”

 

Paul Lopez

“Was any sort of winds taken from your sails given that former cross country champ Kaya did not participate yesterday?”

 

                      Leticia Westby

Leticia Westby, Secretary General, Cycling Federation of Belize

“I would say that she has been the role model for female cycling in Belize. Her not participating yesterday, I perceive the competition yesterday covered that. It was a good competition. Yes her being there would have added and could have produced a Belizean win. But the young girls she was stating was not ready for the competition, we saw differently. It was not us asking them, it was them asking us if they can participate. Of course we know we had an event for them specifically because that is how we are trying to develop women cycling.”

 

Glenn Flowers

“What the junior cyclist came to me and said is that in their preparation for their championship they were practicing a hundred miles and they were not doing the exact miles. They were convincing me that they were ready because they were not only training for their race. They were doing a hundred miles so they know they could compete and do well.”

BPBL Introduces Commissioner of New Basketball League

There’s a new basketball league coming to town. The Belize Premier Basketball League will start its season in four weeks. The seven teams in the inaugural season will be introduced on opening night at the Belize City Civic Center. Among them are four familiar organizations and three new ones. The BPBL has named Claudio Leal as its league commissioner. We spoke with Leal earlier today.

 

                     Claudio Leal

Claudio Leal, Commissioner, Belize Premier Basketball League

“Very significant is that within this league there are three championship cups. We are doing it just like the NBA format. We are going to have what we call one cup in the north, the north and the south, the Maya Cup. Then we have a cup in the east and west, we call that the toucan cup. These two will play and the winners of that cup will get five thousand each and then those two will play for the finals of the championship cup or what we call the Jaguar Cup. The winner will walk away with fifteen thousand dollars, with twenty gold rings and all the niceties. So it is twelve players, each team comprised of twelve players, on foreign player from any part of the world, one Belizean American and ten players. Out of those ten players, one has to be under twenty-one. That is the new format that we have introduced and that is what we are going with. The commissioner’s office also have two deputy commissioners, the first deputy and second deputy, Mr. Francis Arzu and Mr. Amir Garcia, Arzu first and Garcia second. Those two young men brings a lot to the table. I am very comfortable with the by-laws and the regulations we have in place. What makes this league different is the structure,, not only of the management, the executive but all the other committees that have pledged their commitment to serve as a part of this league. So success, the probability of success for this league is huge. It is paramount to understand that this league is not like any other league. This league will raise the level of basketball in Belize.”

New Women’s Cycling Champion, Holy Saturday Race Up Next

Goodnight and welcome to another edition of Sports Monday, I am Paul Lopez. The Thirty-Fourth Annual Women’s Cross Country Cycling Classic was held on Sunday. Nine riders took their positions at the starting line in San Ignacio for the seventy-mile race to the Digi Park in Belize City.  Here is an overview of the race with the help of the Cycling Federation of Belize.

 

In Georgeville, eight riders were racing together, with only one lagging behind. Leading the pack was American elite rider Jade Stevens. The federation also allowed two junior riders and one youth rider to join the big race. That group of eight dwindled down to four riders in Roaring Creek Village. Francine Gigli broke away in front of Garbutt’s Puma Gas Station with sixteen-year-old junior rider Irene Baki on the chase. Gigli ultimately secured a twelve-hundred-dollar station prize at the Belmopan roundabout. The race took on a new dynamic outside of Mahogany Heights when Baki broke away from a group of five lead riders. Baki continued to pry open a gap as the sole lead rider until American Jade Stevens rode across the gap alone and caught up with her eight minutes later.

 

Stevens and Baki shared the lead, with a six-minute gap between the chase group, all the way up to the entrance to Belize City. Stevens launched an attack against Baki at that point and rode away from the junior rider. Folks, Stevens rode across the finish line at the Digi Park all alone with more than a minute to spare before fans caught sight of Baki turning the corner towards the finish line. Stevens is now the Thirty-Fourth Women’s Cross Country Champion, with Irene Baki finishing in second place. The race for third was a thrilling sprint to the finish between Francine Gigli and Junior Rider Lianni Choto, with Gigli clinching the third spot. Interestingly, Baki, Choto, and Chelsey Gillett all competed in last week’s Junior Cross Country Cycling Classic, where Baki came out on top. We heard from both Stevens and Baki after Sunday’s race.

 

                  Jade Stevens

Jade Stevens, Champion, 34th Women’s Cross Country

“Very competitive, very strategic in the beginning. I thought we could work together, but I could see that sometimes it was either people trying to slow me down or come behind me or try to make me do more work. That is how it goes, strategy, trying to make me do some work. That was very strategic, shout out to Lovell team for putting on the pressure.”

 

                      Irene Baki

Irene Baki, Sub-Champion, 34th Women’s Cross Country

“To be honest I feel great, because I could not believe that I actually come in second and I actually manage to come in with the foreigner, until she let me go. But that is fine, because I feel like I did a lot and achieve a lot. So I feel very happy about this. And I just did a cross country last week and I came in first and now this one I came in second, I am really proud.”

Proud, as she should feel, congratulations to all the ladies that competed in this one. It was nothing short of a thrilling race. The final showdown of the cycling season takes place on Saturday. Yes, I am talking about the Ninety-Fifth Holy Saturday Cross Country Cycling Classic. Glenn Flowers, the President of the Cycling Federation of Belize and Secretary General Leticia Westby gave us some insight into what can be expected of the highly anticipated showdown.

 

                    Glenn Flowers

Glenn Flowers, President, C.F.B.

“I am anticipating that this is going to be one of the biggest, best cross country coming up. We have our local guys and a few foreigners that will be contesting us, but I am looking for a fantastic race coming up this Holy Saturday.”

 

          Leticia Westby

Leticia Westby, General Secretary, C.F.B.

“We have on a norm we have about seventy to eighty riders that will be participating. This is where we have the influx of Belizean Americans that will be enjoying the sea and sun and we have already approved twenty-five foreign riders, talking about Canada, U.S.A, all the way down to Venezuela, Honduras.”

 

And now, let’s switch gears from cycling to football! The Belize District First Division Football Closing Season is heating up, with Ceasar Ridge FC on a winning streak. They faced off against Old Road Defenders and dominated the match, finishing with a 2-0 victory. The first goal was scored early in the second half by Jacon Joseph. His shot towards the goal was a second attempt by his team after the goalkeeper deflected the first shot towards the goal. The second goal came late in the second half. And it was a very costly one. A hard tackle by Old Road’s goalkeeper sent Ajani Vaughn to the ground. The ball still went into the goal, but Vaughn suffered a serious foot injury. He was attended to by medics and taken off the field on a stretcher with what appeared to be a displaced knee.

 

That is how this one ended. We also captured highlights from the match between Kelly Street and Hattieville United. Kelly Street defeated Hattieville United by three goals to zero. The first goal was scored by Delroy Andrews in the twenty second minute. Steven Baizar came from behind in the fifty-first minute to put his team up by two goals. Francis Andrews sealed the game for his team with the third goal one minute before the end of regular time. Well folks, that is all we have for you in tonight’s coverage of Sports Monday. I am Paul Lopez.

New Transport Board Holds First Meeting to Kickstart Big Changes for Public Transport

A brand-new Transport Board officially got to work today—and big improvements may be on the way for Belize’s troubled public transportation system.

The newly appointed board held its first meeting this morning in Belmopan. During the session, Minister of Transportation Louis Zabaneh shared his vision for a more efficient, inclusive, and environmentally friendly system that better serves commuters across the country.

Minister Zabaneh said the goal is to create a transportation network that works for all Belizeans—whether they’re students, workers, business owners, or tourists. He’s banking on this new team, made up of professionals from both the public and private sectors, to help drive real change.

The new Transport Board includes:

Joel Cervantes – Chair

Debora Jones – Deputy Chair

Clementina Castillo – Represents private sector users

Sr. Supt. Calbert Flowers – Police Department rep

Russell Medina – Ministry of Infrastructure rep

Thomas Shaw – Represents public transport providers

Peter Williams – Deputy Chief Transport Officer

Also attending today’s meeting were incoming CEO Chester Williams, Chief Transport Officer Leon Gentle, and Policy Director Anna Loague.

 

Ready Call Employee Arraigned for Digi Park Stabbing

A 26-year-old Ready Call customer service agent has been charged in connection with the stabbing of a woman at Digi Park over the weekend.

Erynne Bellezaire was arraigned this morning in the Belize City Magistrate’s Court, where she pleaded not guilty to charges of dangerous harm and use of deadly means of harm for allegedly stabbing Chelsea Lewis during a fight over the weekend.

Bellezaire was granted bail of $1,500 with conditions that she stay at least 100 yards away from Lewis and have no contact with her or any prosecution witnesses. Her next court date is June 16.

Police say the stabbing happened around 3:40 a.m. after a dispute between two groups of women who had earlier been at a nightclub. Lewis suffered multiple stab wounds to the face and body and remains in stable condition at the KHMH. Investigators have not established the reason behind the dispute.

Oney the Horse Tests Negative for Screwworm as Recovery Continues After Brutal Attack

The Belize Agricultural Health Authority (BAHA) has confirmed that Oney, the horse brutally attacked by three teenagers in Belize City, has tested negative for screwworm.

Deputy Technical Director of Animal Health, Dr Jonathon Pech, examined the animal on Sunday and said, “The samples that were taken from the horse, the worms, they were negative for screwworm. I examined him again today, and the wounds are healing well. The horse is looking much better now.”

Dr Pech says with continued treatment, Oney should fully recover within two to three weeks. “I strongly believe that the horse will be able to go back to being clinically healthy in approximately two to three weeks,” he noted.

The update comes after a disturbing video showing three teens hacking the tied-up horse with a machete went viral, sparking outrage across the country. The incident occurred near the Faber’s Road Extension.

Five individuals — including two adults and three minors — were arrested and charged with cattle theft, cruelty to animals, and abetment to commit cruelty to animals.

Oney’s sixteen-year-old owner, Devonte Broaster, said the horse was stolen and that the attackers tried to extort him for its return.

Exit mobile version