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JAM | Mar 14, 2026

PICA and MIND partner to strengthen staff training

/ Our Today

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Juliet Cuthbert Flynn (standing 4th left), state minister in the Ministry of National Security and Peace, along with Granville Valentine (standing 6th left), general secretary of the National Workers’ Union of Jamaica, look on as Garth Williams (seated 2nd left), chief executive officer of the Passport, Immigration and Citizenship Agency (PICA) and Dr Ruby Brown (seated centre), chief executive officer of the Management Institute for National Development (MIND), sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU). The MoU establishes a collaborative framework to strengthen professional learning pathways within the Public Sector Learning Framework (PSLF), with particular emphasis on the security and protective services. Also sharing in the moment are Ms Natalya Ferguson (seated left), director of human resources, PICA; Prudence James-Townsend (seated 2nd right), director of business development and communication, MIND; and Natasha Gordon-Miller (seated right), director of public service capability development, MIND. Other representatives from MIND and PICA are also present. The signing took place on Thursday, March 12, 2026, at the Ministry of National Security and Peace in New Kingston. (Photo: Contributed)


The Passport, Immigration and Citizenship Agency (PICA) and the Management Institute for National Development (MIND) have signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) to develop customised training programmes and structured learning pathways for PICA staff.

The signing of the strategic partnership took place at the Ministry of National Security and Peace in New Kingston on Thursday (March 12).
The MOU was signed by MIND chief executive Dr Ruby Brown and her PICA counterpart Garth Williams.

Under the partnership, MIND will collaborate with PICA to design and deliver specialised training programmes aligned with PICA’s core functions in border management, immigration control, passport services, and citizen administration.

The collaboration supports the Government’s Public Sector Learning and Development Policy and the Public Sector Learning Framework. The MOU will remain in effect for three years.

Addressing the ceremony, portfolio state minister Juliet Cuthbert-Flynn emphasised that the formalisation of the partnership reflects a shared commitment to strengthening the capability of the Jamaican public service.

She noted that the MOU reinforces PICA’s ongoing organisational transformation and its ambition to become a world-class border management and identity services organisation.

“The success of our national institutions ultimately depends on the investment we make in the development of our people… and the government will continue to strengthen these things. When we equip public servants with the right skills, the right tools, and clear professional pathways, we strengthen the capacity of the State itself,” Cuthbert-Flynn declared.

Minister of State in the Ministry of National Security and Peace, Juliet Cuthbert-Flynn, addresses Thursday’s (March 12) memorandum of understanding (MOU) signing ceremony to formalise a partnership between the Passport, Immigration and Citizenship Agency (PICA) and the Management Institute for National Development (MIND) for the development of customised training programmes and structured learning pathways for PICA team members. The ceremony took place at the ministry’s New Kingston offices. (Photo: JIS)

The state minister further highlighted that the initiative aligns with the Government’s broader public sector capability-building agenda and supports the objectives of Vision 2030 Jamaica, particularly National Outcome Six, which calls for an effective, professional, and responsive system of governance.

She commended the leadership of both PICA and MIND for recognising the strategic importance of the collaboration and for taking this bold step towards institutional strengthening.

“Partnerships such as this remind us that national development is built through cooperation, shared vision, and an unwavering commitment to excellence in public service,” Cuthbert-Flynn said.

In his remarks, Williams noted that the undertaking forms part of PICA’s transformation journey from being best-in-class to becoming world-class in border security and service excellence.

“It will provide the framework for PICA to reintroduce online learning opportunities for [approximately] 600 staff to learn, upskill, test, access certification, advance their careers, earn more and lead to a more skilled and motivated workforce,” he said.

Juliet Cuthbert-Flynn (centre), state minister in the Ministry of National Security and Peace, shares a proud moment with representatives of the Management Institute for National Development (MIND) and the Passport, Immigration and Citizenship Agency (PICA) following the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to establish a collaborative framework to strengthen professional learning pathways within the Public Sector Learning Framework (PSLF). The agreement places particular emphasis on the development of the security and protective services professional pathway. From left to right are: Natalya Ferguson, director of human resources, PICA; Garth Williams, chief executive officer, PICA; Dr Ruby Brown, chief executive officer, MIND; and Prudence James-Townsend, director of business development and communication, MIND. The signing took place on Thursday, March 12, 2026, at the Ministry of National Security in New Kingston.(Photo: Contributed)

For her part, Dr. Brown expressed that MIND is pleased to join PICA in this undertaking and looks forward with confidence to the value of the partnership.

“We do not recognise it simply as signing a document. It is about affirming a shared commitment… to building capability, strengthening professional pathways and harnessing public-sector expertise in service of Jamaica,” she said

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