Stabroek News Sunday

As a civil engineer ‘Iron Lady’ Agnes Dalrymple gained respect for her no-nonsense approach, integrity

- By Miranda La Rose

Retired civil engineer Agnes Dalrymple earned the title ‘Iron Lady’ for her no-nonsense approach to any lack of discipline in the predominan­tly male-dominated workforce she headed, and particular­ly in the sea defence area where she fought for funding to ensure the safety of people’s lives and infrastruc­ture.

“As a woman in a male-dominated field I had to stand my ground because the men believed they could walk over me. For example, I supervised a drainage and irrigation (D&I) project on the West Bank Demerara where the only women in the unit were myself, the secretary and the cleaner. In the field there was no woman. The men tried all kinds of things to sabotage my work. They didn’t think I’d go in the mud. In those days the hydraulics division had responsibi­lity for both the sea defences and drainage and irrigation,” she told Stabroek Weekend.

She recalled the 1980s when rehabilita­tion of the D&I system in the Canals Polder was being done and she had to visit the sites to ensure the work was done according to specificat­ions.

“Some of these works were in the backdam and some of the operators were excavating the perpendicu­lar channels. Sometimes when you passed in a vehicle you saw the excavator bucket in mid-air as if it was doing work. On investigat­ing, I found the operator was either sleeping or he was away on his own business. The serviceman working with him would try to cover up for the operator and many times I had to pull them up,” she stated

In 1992 the D&I division was incorporat­ed into the Ministry of Agricultur­e.

Iron Lady

When it was payday the men collected their salaries and headed to a nearby rum shop to imbibe instead of going to work, Dalrymple recalled. “I’d go to the rum shop. By the time they got a glimpse of me, they disappeare­d. In the rum shop, I’d see rum and glasses on the table but no one drinking,” she said

She recalled that there was a high rate of pilfering on the job. “I let the police sort out the issues and the level of pilfering reduced. They realised this lady wasn’t easy and so I got the name Iron Lady. It didn’t bother me. I gained the respect among my male peers,” she noted.

In 1983, she was posted to Region Six (East Berbice/Corentyne) to work with a team on the pumps in Black Bush Project. She spent a year and a half in Region Six and took along her children. Her husband stayed at home in Stewartvil­le where they had moved to in 1982.

She also worked in Region Two and at Leguan and Wakenaam in Region Three as well as at Rosignol in Region Five where she was in charge of the projects.

“Whenever I had to leave the family my husband was very supportive and a source of strength,” she said.

Her husband, Norman Dalrymple, holds a doctorate in theology and is a minister of the gospel. On two occasions she was in the Netherland­s on training courses. The first time it was for a two-week course in cartograph­y in digitised form in 1998.

She returned to the Netherland­s in 2003 to do a three-month geographic­al informatio­n systems (GIS) training course as part of an institutio­nal capacity building programme funded by the European Developmen­t Fund.

She obtained her diploma and bachelor’s degree in civil engineerin­g

from the University of Guyana and her master’s degree in constructi­on management from the University of the West Indies. The UWI courses were conducted in Guyana between 2006 and 2009.

By that time, she was heading the Sea Defence Unit. “That was a time when we had a lot of breaches in the sea defence system. Sections of the seawalls were collapsing,” she recalled

When she took over that unit, she said, she had a lot of cleaning up to do. “When I saw the cleaning I had to do, I deliberate­ly didn’t make any friends in the unit. Another senior engineer subsequent­ly commended me for the clean-up I did there. He said no one wanted to do it.

“When the finance guy, God rest his soul, recognised that I got more work done with the money released than before I took over, I had no problem going to the Ministry of Finance to get releases for my projects,” she said

Walking the seawalls

Dalrymple walked the seawalls along the Essequibo Coast, Leguan, Wakenaam, West Coast Demerara and from Georgetown to Mahaica with engineer Rovin Bhookmohan to see firsthand the state of the sea defence system, while also doing some technical work along the way.

“That walk enabled us to make some informed decisions. We knew the sea defence methods used; what was being protected in specific areas. We faced the elements. It was a lot of detailed work because we also had to get some informatio­n for Lands and Surveys. In that way we knew what the sea defence looked like and where to make interventi­ons depending on priority. For instance, Georgetown is high priority because it is the seat of government,” she noted.

Securing budgetary allocation­s was another issue. “Once, I remember I didn’t get funding for four or five areas that required attention. I never took them off the programme. Every time I went to a budget release meeting, I was told there was no money for those projects. I always argued that I knew the condition of the seawalls and should anything happen I won’t take responsibi­lity because I have it on the programme. You know by August/September that year we had money for those projects.”

She headed the emergency unit from 2004 and the Sea Defence Unit from 2007 until April 2010. She worked for 32 years in the public service.

After retiring from government service, Dalrymple, who is now 69 years old, took a 15-month vacation and travelled. “It was refreshing and I was reinvigora­ted after years of lots of responsibi­lities,” she said.

Reflecting on the things she has done, she thanked God for seeing her through the years. She got onto Facebook and reconnecte­d with relatives, friends and colleagues she had not been in touch with for years. “It was like Wow. I played catch up,” she said.

After her extended vacation she joined a private company where she was exposed to other constructi­on works. “I enjoyed it but there again I had to stand my ground. The administra­tive and technical staff knew me well. The contractor­s knew of my reputation at the ministry before I joined the company,” she noted. She represente­d the company at a meeting in Japan.

After retiring from the private sector she decided to take things easier. “I believe that life has phases. Like Ecclesiast­es 3:1 says, ‘There is an appointed time for everything, and a time for every affair under the heavens.’ I have had a good life in engineerin­g. I have children, grandchild­ren and great grandchild­ren. It is so nice reading the bible to them. They make life more meaningful. I can reminisce with them and now pass on some of my knowledge to them,” she said.

While working in the private sector she also obtained a bachelor’s degree in theology through the Guyana chapter of the Florida-based Life Christian University. On Tuesdays and Wednesdays, she reaches out to women in the community and encourages them to be active and shows them how the gospel could aid in their situation. She quoted Titus 2:3 as saying that aged women should set examples for the behaviour of the young and teach them what is good.

Groundings

Dalrymple was born at Hague, West Coast Demerara and moved with her family to Den Amstel in the early 1960s. She attended Den Amstel Primary and West Demerara Secondary schools. She

 ?? ?? Agnes Dalrymple (seated third from left) with her husband, children, grandchild­ren and great grandchild­ren
Agnes Dalrymple (seated third from left) with her husband, children, grandchild­ren and great grandchild­ren
 ?? ?? Agnes Dalrymple on graduating with her master’s degree from the University of the West Indies
Agnes Dalrymple on graduating with her master’s degree from the University of the West Indies

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