Jamaica Gleaner

‘Gate crash’

PM promises movement on gated community law

- Ruddy Mathison Sunday Gleaner Writer

THE LONG-AWAITED legislatio­n to regulate the operation of gated communitie­s across the island could soon become a reality.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness last Friday announced that a Gated Community Legislatio­n is now being prepared to be placed before Parliament.

Describing the proposed legislatio­n as similar to the Strata Cooperatio­n Act, Holness said it will recognise community associatio­ns as legitimate authoritie­s with the responsibi­lity of making sure that the value of communitie­s are maintained for future generation­s.

Speaking at a handover ceremony for 44 National Housing Trust (NHT) two-bedroom town houses in the new Berkshire Court Housing Developmen­t on Brunswick Avenue in Spanish Town, St Catherine, Holness argued that the cycle of poverty can only be broken when homeowners start to see the need to maintain the value of their community.

“In communitie­s like these, we must ensure that we maintain the regulation­s without exception, because if we consider what is poverty it is the lack of value,” said Holness.

“It is the preservati­on and increase in value that breaks poverty, so we must not give excuses for diminishin­g values,” added Holness.

PRESERVE VALUE

He implored homeowners who received keys to their new homes to do everything in their power to preserve the value of the property in which they have invested for their children.

In May, The Sunday Gleaner reported the concerns of property managers and others tasked with managing gated communitie­s without the legislatio­n in place.

Paying residents of these communitie­s told our news team that they have been made to suffer as their garbage collection and gardening services were discontinu­ed due to non-payment by other residents.

“Persons want to live there. They want the luxury and ability to say that they are living there, but when it comes to payment that is where the problem is. People don’t feel they need to pay the money,” lamented Laurence Peart, a former executive of the New Harbour Village Citizens’ Associatio­n Phase I.

He was supported by Raam Naraysingh, property manager at Caymanas Estate, who noted that some homeowners were not paying the $4,700 monthly maintenanc­e fee.

“You know, you came with the understand­ing that you had to pay a monthly fee (for) the upkeep of the security, for the common areas. You have to pay for the maintenanc­e of the pool, too,” said Naraysingh.

In 2003, Robert Pickersgil­l, the then minister of land, environmen­t and climate change, promised plans to draft what was dubbed the ‘Common Areas Act’ – to deal with unruly residents and other gated-community woes.

 ?? RICARDO MAKYN/MULTI MEDIA PHOTO EDITOR ?? Chairman of the NHT Ambassador Dr Nigel Clarke (second left) and Prime Minister Andrew Holness (centre) surrrounde­d by beneficiar­ies at the handover of keys for the Berkshire Court developmen­t in Spanish Town last Friday.
RICARDO MAKYN/MULTI MEDIA PHOTO EDITOR Chairman of the NHT Ambassador Dr Nigel Clarke (second left) and Prime Minister Andrew Holness (centre) surrrounde­d by beneficiar­ies at the handover of keys for the Berkshire Court developmen­t in Spanish Town last Friday.

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