The Gaston Browne administration seems to generate more scandals than Tian Winter produces hit songs—and true to form, here comes another one: the Bunk Bed Scandal. When Opposition Leader Hon. Jamale Pringle questioned the nearly EC$2 million allocation for “bunk beds” linked to the relocation of Booby Alley residents, he did not raise a trivial procurement issue. He exposed a glaring failure of transparency in one of Antigua and Barbuda’s most delayed, most politicized, and most poorly explained public projects.
According to the Antigua News Room report, Pringle flagged the allocation during debate on the Supplementary Appropriations Act, demanding clarity. To date, the government has provided no answers. And that silence is as troubling as the expenditure itself.
⸻
What We Know from Public Record
The Expenditure
The Antigua News Room article confirms that “close to $2 million” was allocated for bunk beds connected to the Booby Alley housing transfer programme (ANR, Dec. 2025).
The Housing Project
Repeated government statements—including Budget Presentations and Cabinet Notes—identify the redevelopment as a 150-unit climate-resilient condominium project, funded by a grant from the People’s Republic of China and intended for displaced Booby Alley residents.
Public accounts acknowledge that temporary relocation support was necessary, but nowhere has the government explained why bunk beds became a multimillion-dollar procurement item.
⸻
Let’s Do the Math: The Numbers Don’t Add Up
Typical bunk-bed prices (regional/U.S. averages):
EC$400–800 for basic metal frames. Using this price range, EC$2,000,000 ÷ EC$700 ≈ 2,857 bunk beds
Yet the redeveloped site contains 150 units.
Even at the highest possible cost assumption, the purchase would provide 4–18 bunk beds per household—a number so absurd that it raises legitimate suspicion about: Overpricing, Over-ordering, Misallocation, Mislabeling of expenditure … or just plain Tiefingness!
The numbers and the narrative do not add up.
⸻
Why This Scandal Matters
A project funded by foreign grant money and supplemented by local resources must withstand scrutiny. Instead, the Booby Alley redevelopment has been marked by:
• Seven years of shifting timelines
• The absence of published allocation or ownership policies
• A total lack of transparent procurement details
• Repeated promises without documentation
• And now, a multimillion-dollar bunk-bed expenditure with no explanation
This is not proper governance.
This is obfuscation at the expense of the public.
⸻
The Public Deserves More Than Bunk Beds—They Deserve the Truth
Before approving another dollar for Booby Alley, this administration must disclose:
1. The number of bunk beds purchased
2. The unit cost and supplier contract
3. Where the bunk beds are located today
4. Who received them
5. Whether the government is furnishing the new units
6. The legal form of ownership for returning residents
7. The written right of return—if one exists
The Booby Alley community has endured displacement, demolition, and years of uncertainty. They deserve clarity.
Taxpayers deserve accountability.
And Antigua and Barbuda deserves a government that can explain why it spent EC$2 million on bunk beds.
Until then, the Bunk-Bed Scandal will remain the latest entry in a long list of avoidable controversies—another hit in an administration’s ever-growing catalogue.