Jamaica Gleaner

Vendors left in the cold

Sellers say roadwork threatenin­g livelihood

- Mark Titus/Gleaner Writer mark.titus@gleanerjm.com

WHILE WELCOMING the ongoing road-improvemen­t works in their communitie­s, vendors along the Ferris to Mackfield main road in Westmorela­nd are concerned that no provision has been made for them to continue earning a living when the China Harbour Engineerin­g Company completes the project.

“I have been selling my soup here for over 40 years,” said popular soup vendor Markland ‘Footy’ Ricketts. “I have a whole lot of locals and tourists who have supported me all these years, but the Chinese say I have to move.

“The road will be wider, so all of these structures, including mine, will not be here, but I intend to find another location because this is what I do to send all my children to school,” he told The Gleaner.

Forty-nine-year-old farmer Calvin Moncrieff, who sells ground provisions to passers-by along the roadway, is also worried that he could end up struggling to get sales when the project is complete.

“All di bright plans, yet nothing for us. In fact, the bad roads were better for me because the cars drove slowly, so you can make a money, but it will not be the same with these cars flying past, and to make matters worse, we were not considered in the plans,” he said. “I believe they should have created a place – a kind of rest stop – where we can sell to the motorists.”

Efforts by The Gleaner to contact Dwayne Vaz, member of parliament for Central Westmorela­nd, where the developmen­t is located, were unsuccessf­ul, and Ron Daley, the parish manager for the Westmorela­nd Social Developmen­t Commission, requested more time to get more informatio­n on the situation.

NO PLACE TO GO

However, Paulette Dryden Smith, the community developmen­t officer for the Whithorn area, told

The Gleaner that despite the concerns of the vendors, nothing is in place to facilitate them. She said a meeting is planned for April 17 to discuss the concerns.

“Some have gone to the Chinese, but from all indication­s, they are on their own, and as far as I know, there is no local representa­tive speaking for them,” she told this newspaper via telephone.

One vendor, Earl Sinclair, who has been offering ground provisions and fruits along the roadway in Haddo for over a decade, said the Chinese have given him the assurance that he will be doing better business when the road is complete.

“The road-improvemen­t work has not affected me that much, only the dust. And sales are down a bit, but I still have my regular customers, so I still make some money,” he said. “The Chinese say I am going to do better business after the completion of the developmen­t because there will be more tourists and more people passing, so I am preparing myself for that.”

 ?? LIONEL ROOKWOOD/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Expansion work in progress on the Ferris to Mackfield main road in Westmorela­nd.
LIONEL ROOKWOOD/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Expansion work in progress on the Ferris to Mackfield main road in Westmorela­nd.

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