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Oct 28, 2025

State Department raises Jamaica travel advisory to Level 3, authorizes staff departure

State Department raises Jamaica travel advisory to Level 3, authorizes staff departure
Following the catastrophic landfall of Category-5 Hurricane Melissa, the U.S. Department of State on October 28 elevated its Jamaica travel advisory to “Level 3: Reconsider Travel” and authorized the voluntary departure of non-emergency embassy personnel and their families. The advisory cites a convergence of risks—storm damage, crime and health concerns—and warns U.S. citizens that routine consular services in Kingston may be limited.

Videos from Montego Bay show severe airport and hotel damage; power outages persist across the north coast. Travelers are urged to confirm flight availability before departure and avoid nighttime inter-city driving. U.S. government employees remain prohibited from using public buses or visiting high-crime neighborhoods such as Spanish Town and Portmore.

For U.S. firms with staff on assignment in Jamaica, the advisory triggers duty-of-care obligations: companies should account for employees, review evacuation insurance and consider remote-work alternatives while infrastructure recovers. Previous experience from Hurricane Ian suggests hotel capacity may be constrained for weeks, complicating relocation.

The authorized-departure order underscores a broader trend of the State Department acting quickly to move dependents out of hurricane zones, reducing embassy capacity but freeing resources for emergency response. Mobility managers should monitor STEP alerts and advise traveling executives to enroll before departure.

While hurricane season officially ends November 30, climatologists warn that a warming Atlantic has extended the window for severe storms, making contingency planning essential for Caribbean deployments.
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