Stabroek News Sunday

Irritants in the city and fall in standards continue unabated

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Dear Editor,

I was fortunate prior to retirement from the Public Service, to have worked under the stewardshi­p of a number of individual­s who insisted on excellence. First among these was Mr Rafiq Khan then Programme Director and Broadcaste­r par excellence of Radio Demerara in my first job as an assistant librarian. Subsequent­ly I had as permanent secretarie­s Messrs ‘Barry’ Vigilance, Martin De Abreu and Charwin Burnham. They insisted that a high standard of work and not mediocrity be performed by their subordinat­es. Another individual Mr Hutton Griffith would tell his subordinat­es that you are being paid a certain sum to do a job and you must perform to an expected standard, or else leave the job.

It was a recent reflection on a delay of one year in the processing of an applicatio­n for an extension and renovation to the City Council which has caused me to compare the times when Annual Confidenti­al Reports (ACRs) were the basis for awards to public servants of that then meagre monthly incrementa­l pay increase.

When I was in the state of Georgia, USA last year, I contacted the office of the city of Stonecrest, Dekalb, county which municipali­ty was twinned with the City of Georgetown in 2018. I questioned an employee thereof about the time it took that office to process and approve an applicatio­n for the constructi­on or renovation of a residentia­l house. I was informed that procedure could take about two weeks and if there was a query it could extend to about three weeks. My applicatio­n is lingering at City Hall since May/June 2019 and I was informed on 2nd June 2020 that two named individual­s Messrs Bancroft and Gladd would be visiting the site Thursday 4th June 2020 to take some measuremen­ts. No one turned up on Thursday 4th June 2020 and I was not afforded the courtesy of a call to explain the reason for their failing to keep the appointmen­t to this date. Any excuse about Covid-19 would be utter balderdash.

Editor, as a senior citizen in his early eighties who has contribute­d in great measure to the developmen­t of this country and my community, I consider this and other irritants grossly reprehensi­ble. I continue to ask what benefits did the City of Georgetown receive from the twinning exercise with a small first world city named Stonecrest? It is far from satisfacto­ry to call the Public Relations Officer at City Hall and to be answered just ‘hello’. The matter which I was raising with that person was a matter which the city council has neglected to address for a number of decades and it doesn’t call for the interventi­on of Mr Jean Drepeau, former mayor of Montreal, whose management style mayors worldwide learnt to emulate.

Editor for years on end a majority of residents countrywid­e have blatantly refused to dispose of their garbage in a responsibl­e manner. The sad thing about this shortcomin­g is that City Hall and the garbage collectors have refused to do anything constructi­ve about it. When one observes a householde­r emptying the remains from a cooking utensil and eating wares directly into their garbage bins one wonders what sort of upbringing they were exposed to when growing up. Furthermor­e, what sort of logic would they bring to the fore about such remains being exposed to the elements for a week when their bins do not have holes in their bottoms. I had years ago called into a programme called ‘Georgetown on the Move’ and queried of the host if she had ever been caught in traffic behind a garbage truck in the city. She was at a loss to appreciate the reference. But then the drudge being let out from a compacted garbage truck does not amaze anyone in a community with the attendant stench.

Editor, these resounding shortcomin­gs of the City’s offices are not confined to the forgoing. I often wonder when and where is the forum for citizens to express their concerns about other issues which need rapt attention by City Hall. I refer to a letter dated 22nd November 2017 written to the Mayor concerning an injury I suffered due to the roughness of the approach to the bridge leading to the creche from Croal Street to South Road. The letter alluded to an elevated right diaphragm which resulted and a reply from City Hall was received June 19, 2019 to the effect that the matter was being addressed. The condition of the pavement on the northern side of Regent Street right across from City Hall is in a similar decrepit condition just waiting for a senior citizen like me to stumble and fall flat. I ask again where is the medium for these issues to be put to the Council and be urgently addressed by the City.

The falling away of the parapet at bus stops greatly exacerbate­s the possibilit­y of one stumbling before getting both feet firmly onto the parapet. There is no con

sideration about the noise nuisance emanating from motor cycles with their silencers adjusted to create pandemoniu­m at a time when one should be enjoying some quietude. This nuisance is committed by a generation of youths who would not take the time to listen to the Jeopardy nightly programme where their limited general knowledge could be widened. Rank hooliganis­m like that recently exhibited on Homestretc­h Avenue is the name of the game. Some of these same individual­s who are engaged in the hire car business cannot determine a particular house address if they observe two sequenced lot numbers on either side of a street. Is it not time for the public transporta­tion routes to be revisited?

Editor, the death of entities like the Police Male Voice Choir Assembly Rooms, Militia Band, Maranatha Choir, Princessvi­lle orchestra has had a debilitati­ng effect on what a number of our citizens then regarded as elegance or sophistica­tion. One just has to observe the paucity in the attendance of leading figures in the society at concerts at St George’s Cathedral or the National Cultural Centre. But then the fora for such activities outside of the capital city is non-existent. Until we have individual­s at the helm of our affairs who appreciate the promotion of the performing arts and would have been told by their parents of appearance­s by Mr Rudolph Dunbar et al our society would continue to be steeped in the ‘bum bum’ culture. Are there individual­s from the City Council who are identified to look in the welfare of sections of the city and when do they carry out visits to these areas?

How many years has the Groyne jetty given opportunit­ies for anglers to throw a line and why is the jetty at Kitty coated with moss heightenin­g the possibilit­y of a fatal accident by drowning? On the 10th June 2020 yours truly had to undertake the removal of para grass which growth had encroached on the parapet on Lamaha Street between Waterloo and Camp Streets. Who cares about the environmen­t when members of the Diplomatic Corps have to volunteer to clean our seawall frontage of garbage thrown there by some uncaring set of citizens? Just take a peek at Manget Place behind St. Stanislaus College bordering the Police Compound and observe the vermin in the gutter. This is a stone’s throw from the Ministry of Public Security.

Those same people enjoy dumping discarded old gas stoves and cardboard barrels in alleyways and then complain about flooding. A set of people who would not have known of the halcyon days of Major ‘Snakehips’ Henwood and Harry Mayers. I have not heard from any city father of a clarion call for a Georgetown Symphony Orchestra or a call for suggestion­s for attraction­s to be installed in the Promenade and Botanic Gardens for the entertainm­ent of visitors - why not? And there are so many which can be made.

Editor, I thank the heavens that I am now enjoying after a number of decades, a consistent quality of electrical power supply with the minimum of short-lived blackouts. As a senior citizen and retired public servant and Afro-Guyanese I look forward to the implementa­tion of subsidized medication for illnesses which my race is known to suffer from. I recently observed the Public Pharmacy in Georgia publicizin­g the dispensing of such medication free of charge.

Yours faithfully,

Aubrey Alexander

Deputy Director of Civil Aviation (Ret’d)

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