Jamaica Gleaner

Be patient, please – Derby

- Cecelia Cambpell Livingston/Gleaner Writer

PROJECT MANAGER, Vernamfiel­d Developmen­t, Oscar L. Derby, has asked for patience and understand­ing in the developmen­t of Vernamfiel­d in Clarendon.

Derby made the comment during his keynote address at the fourth staging of the Annual Community Incentives and Grants Programme held on Wednesday at the Versalles Hotel in Longbridge, May Pen.

“We need to be patient and understand what it really takes to develop a country based on major projects of this nature. There are some projects which don’t just happen overnight. It takes a lot of careful planning, doing implementa­tion can be such that technology might not even be available today,” he shared, drawing an analogy to The Netherland­s project to stop the incursion of the North Sea into the land. This, he said, was completed in 2014 – 55 years after it started.

With the encouragem­ent to think of Vernamfiel­d not as an airport, but a city, Derby, who heads the project with an impressive record in aviation, said the trend in aviation is that airplanes are being built for long range and heavy lift. He pointed out that if Jamaica is to participat­e in the global aircraft system, then a long runway is required.

“There are two places in Jamaica that participat­e in such a long runway in Jamaica, and that is the southern plains of St Catherine, which has undergone developmen­t of residentia­l communitie­s that will intervene in those areas where a large airport with a long runway would be implemente­d,” he said, adding that the only place that remains for such a project is Vernamfiel­d.

A LOT OF WORK

He said the project which has already started can take up to 20 years to build out fully.

The Community Incentives and Grants Programme is aimed at bolstering community participat­ion in developmen­t activities through rewards and incentives. The central objective is to create a platform for community groups and stakeholde­rs to be given incentives and grants, parish manager of the Social Developmen­t Commission, Baldvin McKenzie, informed in his overview.

Among the winners on Wednesday at the ceremony were James Hill CDC – for Priority Planning and Project Developmen­t Award; Ministry of Labour copping the Parish InterAgenc­y Network Award; Kellits CDC took home the prize for the Local Economic Developmen­t Support Award; and for Most Supportive Community Leader Floyd Smith, from Free Town/Sandy Bay CDC, took the award.

McKenzie urged the community representa­tives to continue working and batting for their CDCs as their work were all ‘award-winning’ contributi­ons.

 ?? GILCHRIST PHOTO BY CARL ?? Parent of the Year, David White (right), collects his trophy from Pastor Paul Hemmings.
GILCHRIST PHOTO BY CARL Parent of the Year, David White (right), collects his trophy from Pastor Paul Hemmings.
 ??  ?? DERBY
DERBY

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