Jamaica Gleaner

Bartlett bemoans the state of Negril

- Claudia Gardner Assignment Coordinato­r

WESTERN BUREAU: TOURISM MINISTER Edmund Bartlett says the resort town of Negril is suffering from the effects of poor spatial and infrastruc­tural planning, which has continued in the half a century since the town was identified as a tourism Mecca.

Bartlett, who was speaking at a recent Negril Chamber of Commerce meeting, which was called to highlight issues relating to the town’s haphazard developmen­t and shabby state, bemoaned the fact that despite being a premier tourism destinatio­n, the town is lacking in so many critical ways.

“Negril is our third largest tourism centre in arguably the Caribbean and Negril, has not been developed in a very structured way, although it could, because Negril was one of the few places that was identified very early in the years when tourism was being seen as a possible pathway for economic developmen­t,” said Bartlett.

BASIC SERVICES

“And, therefore, when the lands were all bought up in some areas and when the beachfront was identified, tourism was in the back of the minds of the governance at the time ... ,” continued Bartlett.

“But nothing happened in a structured, planned and organised way, so that the carrying capacity of Negril to drive the volume of visitors to begin with, and the density of rooms was never, ever built in. So we ended up without a proper sewage system; without a proper water system; without a proper electrific­ation system.”

“We ended up without a municipali­ty that would manage the central services and the basic services of Negril,” said Bartlett. “So now we have to look, almost after the horse has gone through the gate, on how do we retrofit, how do we step back one inch in order to step forward a foot.”

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