AgricultureCommunityLocal NewsNewsYouth Farming back in Deacons Farm, as MP plans youth job boost by Shamar Blunt 26/02/2026 written by Shamar Blunt Updated by Shanna Moore 26/02/2026 2 min read A+A- Reset Project participant Vincent Edwards (right) handing over farming equipment to Steven Stewart and St Michael North West MP Neil Rowe during the morning's brief handing over cermony. (SB) FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 206 St Michael North West MP Neil Rowe has revived his community farming project in Deacons and announced plans to expand it to create more jobs and training opportunities for young people after earlier challenges stalled the initiative. The Northwest Alliance Agricultural Project, which began in 2019, was born out of a desire to give a young man from the community a second chance, he told reporters on Thursday. The group is currently cultivating carrots, beans, beetroot, lettuce and okra, and managing โ20 black belly sheep and growingโ, said project participant Vincent Edwards. โAnything we plant down here we does get sold.โ The idea took shape when a young resident, after returning home from prison, struggled to find employment, Rowe said. โWhen a young man from his community first came home from jail and was looking for work and at that time it was very challenging in being able to find a job for himโฆ I asked him if there was anything else that he would like to do, and he told me he donโt mind going into farming,โ Rowe said. โI suggested to him to look for a piece of government land in the community, and I would take the opportunity in turning it into an agricultural project.โ The project faced hurdles, particularly in securing a reliable water supply. Rowe said navigating the administrative process was also not easy, but the issue was eventually resolved. You Might Be Interested In Crystal Beckles-Holder, 2nd runner up in regional competition GUYANA: Body of child found after gold mine collapses Barbadians asked to help with return tickets for Haitians โIt had some challenges in relation to water supply, but despite that I managed to overcome that hurdle, despite all the red tape that I had to go throughโฆ and being able to assist these guys with having their own water supply, which they do have now,โ he said. Rowe presented tools to the young farmers to help them continue their work. โI trust that these tools will help the youngsters who are working on this project to be of good use and to help them to reap whatever they sow where this project here is concerned,โ he said. Rowe said he intends to broaden the initiative to include more aspiring farmers across the constituency. โMy aim is to really expand this projectโฆ because I always say that farming is a livelihood and anybody that is serious about farmingโฆ could make a decent living from farming.โ Plans are also in place to diversify operations. โThey want to move from obviously the crops to animal husbandry, whereas we would be looking to invest in chickens and rabbits and things like that,โ he said, noting that additional land space and fencing would be introduced to improve security. Project participant Vincent Edwards said transforming the once overgrown lot had long been on his mind. โIt was always in my brainโฆ It was always a jungleโฆ there needs to be something done with the land,โ he said. โI asked my man Neil; he told me work everything and he will back me. So I do what I had to do.โ Shamar Blunt You may also like Prolonged water outages leave rural folk struggling 01/04/2026 Experts hail Barbadosโ removal from global watchlists 01/04/2026 Barbados seeking to improve on last yearโs CARIFTA Games performance 01/04/2026