Jamaica Gleaner

‘BLAME US’

Phillips accepts that Gov’t’s failure to enforce the rules over the years was major contributo­r to recent f looding

- Christophe­r Serju Sunday Gleaner Writer christophe­r.serju@gleanerjm.com

OPPOSITION LEADER Dr Peter Phillips has accepted that the failure of successive administra­tions to enforce the more than 100-yearold Building Act is partly to be blamed for the devastatio­n caused by floodwater­s last week.

Phillips also concluded that the failure of the country’s antiquated national drainage system to keep pace with the growing demands of especially housing developmen­t contribute­d to the flooding of some communitie­s.

“It is clear that over many, many years, what has happened is that there has not been enough coordinati­on between the planning process for constructi­on, commercial and residentia­l, and the provision of drainage in communitie­s.

“So, for example, residentia­l communitie­s have been authorised to be built but the main drains that take the increased water flow because of the paving, for example, that occurs have not been expanded,” admitted Phillips during a media briefing last Wednesday.

“That is one aspect of the problem, the other aspect of the problem is enforcemen­t. We have failed to enforce, and a third aspect of the problem is what I might just call unplanned settlement or squatter communitie­s.

“The last time I think we had any major drainage rehabilita­tion – a national drainage effort – was probably about 40 years ago when the upgraded Sandy Gully arrangemen­ts took place in the mid-seventies,” added Phillips, whose People’s National Party (PNP) has formed the government for 23 of the past 28 years.

He was supported by Noel Arscott, the opposition spokesman on local government, who argued that there is an urgent need for a modern, comprehens­ive document to replace the Building Act of 1907.

Arscott, who was local government minister in the last PNP administra­tion, berated the governing Jamaica Labour Party for its failure to debate the 2017 Building Act which was tabled in Parliament, just before the February 25, 2016 general election.

“It addresses many of the building issues, town planning, no-build zones and this kind of thing, and certainly after a year or year plus ... it has been tabled but certainly not debated. We need to certainly upgrade our Building Act to a more modern and comprehens­ive [one] to look at the way we do buildings,” said Arscott.

CHANGES ARE COMING

Following a tour of some of the hardest-hit communitie­s last Wednesday, Prime Minister Andrew Holness vowed that changes are coming as persons would soon not be allowed to just live anywhere they choose, especially if it puts their lives in danger.

“It is clear that we are experienci­ng weather events of greater intensity and greater frequency than before. It is indeed a challenge to the existing infrastruc­ture.

“There already is a surveyor plan for Jamaica, and that has to be fast-tracked in terms of how we implement it. I think there are greater issues. Where people choose to live will now have to take on greater scrutiny. Informal settlement­s, and those things, cannot be allowed to continue in the future,” said Holness.

He declared that greater effort will be taken to ensure that the rules are enforced as it relates to where people are allowed to live.

“We have to be far more proactive in ensuring that people do not settle in areas where they are at potential risk,” said Holness.

 ?? JERMAINE BARNABY/FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Two pedal cyclists ride through floodwater­s in New Haven last Tuesday. New Haven is one of the communitie­s in the Corporate Area that are usually flooded once the island experience­s heavy rain.
JERMAINE BARNABY/FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPH­ER Two pedal cyclists ride through floodwater­s in New Haven last Tuesday. New Haven is one of the communitie­s in the Corporate Area that are usually flooded once the island experience­s heavy rain.
 ??  ?? PHILLIPS
PHILLIPS

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