Education
University of Durham.
politician President of the Senate of Barbados
University of Durham.
Since 2012 she has served as President of the Senate of Barbados. She lost her sight due to cataracts at the age of four. She initially had to leave school, before attending a school for the blind from the age of six.
In 1999 Ifill became the first blind person to graduate from the University of the West Indies, gaining a degree in Sociology and Psychology from Cave Hill Campus in her native Barbados.
She went on to obtain an Master of Business Administration at Durham Business School, in England. In 2008 Barbadian Prime Minister David Thompson appointed her to the Senate, and subsequently to the position of deputy President of the Senate.
On 14 March 2012, Prime Minister Freundel Stuart announced that, the following week, he would appoint Ifill President of the Senate. She became the first woman to hold that position, and the first person with a disability, as well as the youngest ever holder of the position, at the age of 38.
She succeeded Branford Taitt (in office 2008-2012).
Ifill also serves as President of the Barbados Council for the Disabled.