Jamaica Gleaner

‘X Marks the Spot’ for Hazard Primary School

- Cecelia CampbellLi­vingston/Gleaner Writer

HAZARD PRIMARY is the first of 18 schools that will be benefiting from physical improvemen­ts to their school zones road infrastruc­ture over the next three years.

The project, which is being implemente­d by the Jamaica National Foundation’s ‘X Marks the Spot’ crosswalk road safety campaign, was unveiled last Wednesday at the May Penbased institutio­n.

Chairman of the JN Foundation, Parris Lyew-Ayee, informed the gathering on the school compound that the genesis of the project resulted from a study that was commission­ed by the JN Foundation, in collaborat­ion with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

“This study, the Child Road Safety Assessment Report, underscore­d the need to protect our children and identified the respective schools and zones in which children were most vulnerable to incidences of road traffic crashes, injuries and fatalities,” he said, sharing that the school zones required specific infrastruc­tural and/or safety interventi­ons, both at the physical and social levels.

Statistics show that over the past five years, more than 12 children died on Jamaican roads, with many others suffering from life-altering injuries.

Lyew-Ayee said the aim of the campaign was to encourage advocacy and discussion about road safety in schools and households, and to use the result of the report to identify other areas for the infrastruc­ture; interventi­ons which will include the installati­on of crosswalks, signs, speed-reduction surfaces, and other countermea­sures.

Hazard Primary benefited from signage for bus lay-bys, pedestrian gates and the widening and paving of the sidewalks

Member of Parliament for Central Clarendon Mike Henry, in his keynote address commended the Jamaica National Foundation and its internatio­nal partners – UNICEF, FIA (UK) and Abertis (Spain) – and said it is coincident­al that the school is named Hazard and the children are being protected from the ‘hazards’ of the road.

“Children are the future of the country and in this regard, safeguardi­ng our children will ultimately mean safeguardi­ng our future,” he said.

Henry pointed out that the unveiling was timely as the country was experienci­ng avoidable road fatalities.

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LYEW-AYEE

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