Jamaica Gleaner

Garbage collection a process, not an event

NSWMA boss chides ‘unfair critics’

- Ryon Jones Staff Reporter ryon.jones@gleanerjm.com

FACED WITH a barrage of criticism over its garbage collection over the past year, executive director of the National Solid Waste Management Authority (NSWMA), Audley Gordon, says many of the critics are being unfair to the agency he was appointed to lead just over one year ago.

According to Gordon, despite a shortage of trucks and other equipment, the NSWMA is doing its best in a country where the proper disposal of garbage is not a priority.

“There is this misconcept­ion that I see in social media and in the regular media that garbage collection is an event, so you just treat with it and you solve the garbage collection once and for all,” said Gordon.

“Garbage collection is a process. We just keep doing things and behaving in ways without understand­ing that what we are doing is adding garbage to the society; we just live. With that said, you will always be seeing garbage, because there are some areas where we have to clean the skip twice a day,” added Gordon.

He said the NSWMA tries to stick to a schedule of collecting garbage in each area at least once weekly, and a build-up of garbage does not reflect derelictio­n of duty on the part of the agency in most cases.

“Nobody wants to see garbage around, and we understand that, but we are working very hard where we can get to the place where people don’t

have to contend with that excess garbage.

“The residents can help us by ensuring that they properly containeri­se their garbage,” said Gordon, as he added that more money needs to be pumped into dealing with solid waste management locally.

“We have to tie solid waste to the health of the nation in a more meaningful and tangible way, and that means how we allocate resources to solid waste management,” said Gordon.

“We are talking about a situation where we fund public cleansing upfront

in a way that will see us mitigating significan­tly, if not eliminatin­g, all the breakout of diseases that usually come from mosquitoes and other garbagerel­ated issues.

“When there is a case of chik-V or ZIKV monies are found and good reactive measures are taken. The conversati­on I am trying to build out now is for a more proactive approach, which will see us spending more resources on the front end to ensure that not only do we have the hardware which includes the trucks and equipment, but we have a proper public education campaign that

see a sustaining of the messaging in a way that it will ring home to people,” added Gordon.

While agreeing on the need to properly fund the country’s waste-disposal system, deputy CEO of the Jamaica Environmen­t Trust (JET), Suzanne Stanley, is not convinced that the NSWMA is doing the best with what it has

According to Stanley, solid waste management in Jamaica has been in critical need of attention for too many years, and if action is not taken urgently there could be a seriously negative impact on every sector of the society.

“Jamaica has long been struggling with an ineffectiv­e solid waste management arrangemen­t; it is a very poorly resourced area of our administra­tion and the organisati­on itself has suffered from a lot of institutio­nal failures over the years,” said Stanley, who is set to take over as the head of JET tomorrow.

“I do believe it is high time that improving the solid waste management system in Jamaica is made a priority, as the longer we leave it the more costly it is going to be to fix.

“We receive daily complaints about garbage not being collected in communitie­s, and more often than not when we investigat­e it is not a case where the garbage was picked up last week; it is an ongoing problem where garbage has not been collected in weeks, months,” added Stanley.

 ?? NORMAN GRINDLEY/CHIEF PHOTO EDITOR ?? Garbage improperly dumped on Charles Street in downtown Kingston last week.
NORMAN GRINDLEY/CHIEF PHOTO EDITOR Garbage improperly dumped on Charles Street in downtown Kingston last week.
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