Jamaica Gleaner

Desmond McKenzie: More money coming for drought mitigation

- Corey Robinson Sunday Gleaner Writer corey.robinson@gleanerjm.com

MINISTER OF Local Government and Community Developmen­t Desmond McKenzie says that he will be requesting additional funds from the Cabinet to help mitigate drought conditions affecting communitie­s across the country.

According to McKenzie, five parishes have been critically affected by the drought and he is concerned, having received reports of persons using unfit and unsafe trucks to shuttle water to affected areas.

“Next Monday (tomorrow), I will be making a submission to the Cabinet, because based on the informatio­n that is coming, we are going to be in for a rough time,” said McKenzie.

He added that more than $60 million has already been allocated for drought mitigation across the island this year.

“Recently, some $36 million has been released and we are going to be releasing another $25 million next week to prop up the parishes that have become more desperate now for water,” said McKenzie, who accepted that the $61 million allocated “is just a drop in the bucket”.

He listed Portland, St Elizabeth, sections of Manchester, Trelawny and St Ann among the worst affected areas.

“Between the Ministry of Local Government and the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, under which the National Water Commission falls, we are going to be providing close to $171 million to get water across the country,” said McKenzie.

The local government minister issued a warning to municipal corporatio­ns which truck water in vehicles that have not been checked by health authoritie­s.

“While I appreciate that there is a chronic shortage of water trucks across the country during the period, the Government has a responsibi­lity to ensure that any truck that is used to deliver water to any community in need of water meets the requiremen­ts under the public health regulation,” said McKenzie.

“All trucks that carry water on behalf of the Government, whether it be local government or central government, must be sanitised and certified by the Public Health Department.

“Any municipali­ty that is caught violating this critical requiremen­t, we are going to expose them. We cannot, and the Government is not prepared to, risk the health of the citizens just because persons are against following the requiremen­ts,” declared McKenzie.

AVAILABLE VEHICLES

He charged that one municipal corporatio­n has claimed that it has been forced to use whatever vehicles it can find to reach affected areas.

The People's National Party spokespers­on on local government, Dr Angela Brown Burke, last week charged that the drought situation was more acute and widespread than described by the Government.

She called on the Government to move immediatel­y to make additional sums available to put municipal corporatio­ns across the island in a better position to respond to the urgent demands.

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