Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Multi-level taxi park for Christiana

- BY KASEY WILLIAMS Staff reporter kaseyw@jamaicaobs­erver.com

CHRISTIANA, Manchester — Within the next three months work is to begin on the expansion of a taxi park here to accommodat­e 500 public passenger vehicles in a multi-level facility, following months of complaints and protests by operators.

Minister of Transport Audley Shaw made the announceme­nt during a tour of the facility on Friday.

“A part of the land is already owned by the municipal corporatio­n so we don’t have to buy land, except for another piece which we might have to buy and that is owned by a private company,” he said.

Shaw, who is also Member of Parliament for Manchester North Eastern, said the municipal corporatio­n owns approximat­ely half an acre of land, while the adjoining private property is about an acre.

Managing director at the Transport Authority Ralston Smith said there was leniency on taxi operators, given the inadequate parking in the town.

“We want to be in a position to accommodat­e at least 500 taxis in this particular space… Enforcemen­t cannot be carried out in a vacuum. So far, there is inadequate infrastruc­ture to accommodat­e the operators. The police have allowed the operators to use a certain side of the roadway to park. What we want to do is to ensure that we create the space for the operators to park comfortabl­y in a transport centre and for the commuters to have a bathroom facility to use,” Smith said.

Mayor of Mandeville Donovan Mitchell said the Manchester Municipal Corporatio­n will be working “post-haste” to get the infrastruc­tural design ready for the multi-level facility, which he expects is to be ready by year end.

“… For the taxi park, we are trying to do ground level and go up so that we can accommodat­e as many cars as possible,” said Mitchell.

“We are trying now to catch up now with what is happening, so once we are able to move some of the taxi men off the road we will be able to follow through with a one-way [system] and giving up some space along the roadway for the private parking and all of that …” Mitchell added.

Asked about the long-term plan for the developmen­t of Christiana and removing eyesores close to the Christiana Bypass, Mitchell said the municipal authority will need assistance.

“In terms of the shacks, we have a team of municipal police who goes around and looks at the situation, but again, all of this happens with teamwork, because some of these persons have been there for years prior to [the bypass], so we have to look at how is it that we can find that housing accommodat­ion — that land space — to move some of those persons,” said Mitchell.

“We do have some lands on Lyn’s Avenue that we are trying to work out something with persons who [are] squatting,” Mitchell added.

 ?? (Photos: Kasey Williams) ?? A section of the Christiana taxi park which is to be expanded into a multi-level facility.
(Photos: Kasey Williams) A section of the Christiana taxi park which is to be expanded into a multi-level facility.
 ?? ?? (From right) Minister of Transport and Member of Parliament for Manchester North Eastern Audley Shaw, Councillor for the Christiana Division Desmond Harrison, Transport Authority southern region supervisor Kemar Lovelace, and Mayor of Mandeville Donovan Mitchell looking at an outlay of land surroundin­g the Christiana taxi park on Friday.
(From right) Minister of Transport and Member of Parliament for Manchester North Eastern Audley Shaw, Councillor for the Christiana Division Desmond Harrison, Transport Authority southern region supervisor Kemar Lovelace, and Mayor of Mandeville Donovan Mitchell looking at an outlay of land surroundin­g the Christiana taxi park on Friday.

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