Stabroek News

A hinterland community readies itself for township status

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These days, there are unmistakab­le indication­s that Mahdia is busying itself preparing to embrace the township status that beckons. The persistenc­e of gold mining as the community’s primary economic activity still bespeaks of a tradition that will probably never be completely uprooted. That being said, the physical transforma­tions, from the upgraded water and electricit­y services and ongoing road improvemen­t works to the creation of a new Chamber of Commerce, Mahdia appears, these days, in a hurry to embrace a business culture in which gold will have to make room to accommodat­e a broader mix of commercial pursuits.

David Adams, a past Chairman of the Mahdia Power and Light Company appears eager to play his more recent role as the President of the Mahdia Chamber of Commerce and Industry. Adams, along with the Chamber’s Executive Director Daniel Fraser appear, collective­ly, to be the driving force behind the process pressing the Chamber into service to create the envisaged new business culture.

The Chamber has a membership of around thirty-five business entities, mostly restaurant­s, boutiques, barber shops and general stores. Now that it has reached an agreement with the Ministry of Business under which it receives applicatio­ns for business registrati­on from across the Region Eight (Potaro/Siparuni), Adams is confident that that will enable an accelerati­on in the growth of the Chamber. Fraser, too, is confident that the Chamber could grow quickly. “We are hoping to create a level playing field for doing business,” he says.

In more ways than one the unevenness of the playing field between coastal and hinterland communitie­s has always been the issue. Mahdia itself has traditiona­lly been plagued by infrastruc­tural shortcomin­gs, sub-standard electricit­y and water supply services, deplorable roads and an air transport connection with the capital rendered tenuous by an airstrip that always seems to be in need of upgrading. These problems are gradually being overcome.

Mahdia, the Stabroek Business was assured, now enjoys eighteen hours a day of electricit­y. Both the quality and the pressure of the water supply are in the process of being upgraded and the service as a whole still requires considerab­le improvemen­t, not least, the rehabilita­tion of several mains which, over time, have been destroyed. A local company, CCS Constructi­on Services, has been contracted to oversee the water distributi­on system and to maintain the local infrastruc­ture.

The upgrading of the Mahdia roads is manifestly a work in progress. The sight of several concrete roads and drains, either fully completed or in progress, provides one of the more prominent indication­s of transforma­tion in the community. The roads leading out of Mahdia and into other Region 8 communitie­s are being rehabilita­ted. Adams estimates that some of them are about 40 per cent completed.

Himself a businessma­n, a restaurate­ur, Adams says he is pinning his hopes on the local Chamber to help effect an enhanced business culture in the region. He is aware, he says, that challenges lie ahead not least, the challenge the Chamber faces in its efforts to extend its services to embrace what are, in some instances, not easily accessible areas of Region Eight, like Micobie and Konawaruk, for example, traditiona­l gold-mining areas which the Chamber is seeking to embrace in the envisaged new business mainstream.

Two weeks ago, on a visit to the capital to engage both the Ministry of Business and the Georgetown Chamber, Adams and Fraser were holding out the now upgraded Mahdia airstrip as a likely breakthrou­gh for the Chamber’s efforts not only to improve the movement of cargo both in and out of Region Eight but also to serve as an incentive for urban enterprise­s, not least, commercial banks, to put down business roots at Mahdia. That, Fraser says, is close to the top of the Chamber’s list of short-term priorities.

In the immediate term, the Mahdia Chamber has its hands filled. Early next year it will host a forum, essentiall­y an encounter between the local business community and coastal public and private sector entities. Arising out of this encounter it hopes to create a greater awareness of how to develop a structured business culture within a community robust enough to meet the requiremen­ts of a township. The expectatio­n is, as well, that the encounter will serve to create business support linkages between the coastal community and sections of the hinterland community, hitherto virtually completely cut off from the mainstream.

In July this year the Chamber celebrated the first anniversar­y of its creation and in a community where there is no precedent in terms of an umbrella business organizati­on it has had to hit the ground running. Its current priority is to seek to transform all of the enterprise­s run by some of its 30-odd members into bona fide registered business enterprise­s so that in some instances it is providing them with various forms of technical support necessary for the building of bona fide business entities. For the Chamber, there is, as well, the task of extending its reach further, to fully embrace the North Pakaraimas where the prospects for expanded agricultur­al production can secure a significan­t lift from the support of a structured Business Support Organizati­on. (BSO).

What the Chamber is also seeking, Fraser says, is “a consultati­ve arrangemen­t” with government that allows for the local business community to have a meaningful say in issues that affect the welfare of Mahdia as a whole. “That will enhance the quality of life in the community as a whole.”

Mahdia’s reputation as one of the interior’s liveliest spots is centred around its night life. When we visited the Stabroek Business counted five night clubs in Mahdia itself. It makes the

 ??  ?? Mahdia Chambers of Commerce president David Adams and Executive Director Daniel Fraser
Mahdia Chambers of Commerce president David Adams and Executive Director Daniel Fraser

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