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The Government of the Turks and Caicos Islands has confirmed it is walking back its Destination Marketing Organization (DMO) experiment, signaling a major shift in national tourism policy. The entity known as Experience Turks and Caicos is now set to be reimagined after officials acknowledged that its structure did not sufficiently align with the country’s Public Finance Management Ordinance or statutory governance framework. From the beginning, replacing the former Tourist Board with a DMO model sparked public debate. Critics questioned whether tourism marketing in TCI was broken — and whether the costly overhaul would outperform the traditional statutory system it replaced. In a formal statement, government officials conceded that tourism promotion must operate within established statutory standards to ensure transparency, accountability, and oversight of public funds. Opposition Leader Edwin Astwood is now demanding full transparency on the cost of the DMO experiment, governance failures, and a clear timeline for when Experience Turks and Caicos will cease operating in its current form. Meanwhile, Premier Charles Washington Misick has defended the policy reset, saying tourism marketing must strictly conform to traditional public-sector accountability norms moving forward. The reversal marks a significant political moment in TCI — raising questions about governance, public spending, and the future direction of one of the territory’s most vital industries. Deandrea Hamilton reporting. #TurksAndCaicos #ExperienceTCI #TCINews #TCIPolitics #TourismPolicy #DMO #CaribbeanTourism #GovernmentAccountability #EdwinAstwood #CharlesMisick