SCDF launches Carnival 2022 schedule, focuses on safety, economy and culture

   SCDF launches Carnival 2022 schedule,  focuses on safety, economy and culture

St. Maarten’s 2022 Carnival Schedule runs from April 16 until May 3.

 

POND ISLAND--The St. Maarten Carnival Development Foundation (SCDF) has launched the schedule of events for Carnival 2022 with an eagerness to contribute to a recovering economy and rebuild the country’s cultural development.

  If all goes as planned, Carnival 2022 will be St. Maarten’s largest economic stimulator since the festival was last held in 2019, directly influencing the business, travel and cultural sectors, according to SCDF.

  Carnival will be held against a COVID-19 backdrop for which the SCDF has simultaneously launched an extensive Carnival COVID-19 Safety Plan that calls for full vaccination or negative tests (see related story).

  The plan builds on SCDF’s existing COVID-safety plan, and is largely based on successful templates of international festivals that have restarted during the pandemic.

  After a two-year hiatus, Carnival 2022 will span 19 days, starting with the opening of Carnival Village on April 16 and closing with the burning of King Momo on May 3. If the March pre-Carnival events are counted, the entire festival spans 24 days.

  The schedule features 11 locally themed events in the Village, six international shows and three parades. The promotors of the staple shows of Carnival have all confirmed their concerts for Carnival 2022. These are the Night of the Hit Makers, Caribbean Flag Fest, One Love Reggae Concert, Bacchanal Sunday, Noche Latina and Soulful Company.

No jump-ups

  Out of caution and choosing to focus on events it can control in terms of its safety plan and other COVID protocols in Carnival Village, the SCDF has decided not to host any jump-ups for Carnival 2022. The only road events that will be held are the Children’s and Grand Carnival Parades, for which certain approved protocols will be attached.

  “As much as we love our J’Ouvert, under the circumstances there is no responsible manner for us to host an event that draws 25,000 people to the road, uncontrolled. That is not a tenable situation. We can have protocols for parades in discussion with troupe leaders and we can control an enclosed open-air venue like Carnival Village where our protocols and safety plan will be strictly enforced. Besides, we have events scheduled in the Village that will, to an extent, replace that feeling of the road anyway,” SCDF president Alston Lourens said.

  He said the foundation is excited to host local events once again. “We have our pageants back, two years of calypso material, parade revellers have energy to let out; we will see a lot of our local bands on stage, a steel-pan show, a Breakfast Fete, our Village cooking competition the Cook-Up and our local specialty drink competition the Cock-Up. We miss these events that bring our people and our culture together,” he said.

  Lourens stressed that Carnival 2022 offers St. Maarten a “wonderful and historic” opportunity to lead the way as the largest Carnival in the North-Eastern Caribbean that can be showcased as positive example of how a festival can be held in a safe and responsible manner.

  This message, he said, was also relayed to Minister of Tourism, Economic Affairs, Transport and Telecommunication (TEATT) Roger Lawrence when the SCDF met with the minister to present its plans.

  “To assist our tourism product and the overall economy this is the re-start we’ve been waiting for as well,” Lourens said. “There are competing festivals around us that cannot start because of the structure of their respective events. We have one significant advantage over them and it’s called Carnival Village. For years we have been bragging about the uniqueness of having an open-air, enclosed venue where everything is held. Now, it offers us the opportunity to enforce a sound COVID safety plan that is all-encompassing. Other festivals do not have this and thus cannot contribute to their economies the way they would like. We can, and we are fully prepared to put on quite a cultural event for residents and visitors alike,” Lourens said.

  Lourens said SCDF has been meticulous in putting together the schedule and has been communicating with its major corporate partners about Carnival preparations. As usual, there are still several stakeholders’ meetings that will be held in the months leading up to Carnival.

  He said the foundation has been inundated with calls from around the Caribbean and the world about St. Maarten’s Carnival, with people looking to travel to St. Maarten in the absence of other competing major festivals.

  “We should never underestimate the importance of Carnival to the local vendor, the taxi driver, the small and medium hotel properties, food wholesalers and retailers, songwriters, musicians, disc jockeys, costume makers, make-up artistes, bartenders, sound and light engineers, printing companies, beverage companies and more. Carnival moves every sector and after two years of non-activity, all of our partners and the economy of our country are ready to move again,” Lourens concluded.

The Daily Herald

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