Jamaica Gleaner

State entities sued for Riverton dump fire

- Nickoy Wilson/Gleaner Writer nickoy.wilson@gleanerjm.com

EIGHT RESIDENTS of Kingston and St Andrew have taken legal action against three government entities for what they claim are breaches of their constituti­onal rights after they suffered a range of illness related to the March 2015 fire that scorched the Riverton City dump in western St Andrew, spewing smoke and fumes that blanketed the Corporate Area.

Further, the residents are seeking to recover damages from the government entities for negligence, misfeasanc­e in public office, and nuisance.

In court documents obtained by

The Gleaner, the National Solid Waste Management Authority (NSWMA), MPM Waste Management Limited (MPM) and the Natural Resources Conservati­on Authority (NRCA) are said to have breached the residents’ “constituti­onal right to enjoy a healthy and productive environmen­t free from the threat of injury or damage from environmen­tal abuse and degradatio­n of the ecological heritage and the right to humane treatment”.

The residents claim that smoke and fumes inhaled during the three-week fire, lasting from March 7-29, 2015, caused them to suffer personal injury, loss and damage, with some developing pharyngiti­s, sinusitis, pneumonia, bronchitis, among other respirator­y ailments and nausea.

ALLEGED NEGLIGENCE

In respect of the NSWMA, the residents say the company was negligent in keeping or allowing dangerous material to be kept at the Riverton disposal facility without sufficient safeguards to prevent and/or eliminate the dangers attendant on the accumulati­on of such material.

They also claim that the NSWMA was negligent, as it kept material susceptibl­e to ignition.

Similar claims were made in relation to the MPM Waste Management Limited.

As for the NRCA, the residents claim that the oversight body was aware, or ought to have been aware, of the non-compliance by the NSWMA and MPM with the terms of condition of the permit they were granted, but failed to take any or sufficient steps to enforce compliance.

Also, the residents say the NRCA failed to take pre-emptive or corrective action relative to the NSWMA’s non-compliance with the terms and conditions of the awarded permit.

The residents want compensati­on for special damages, constituti­onal redress inclusive of constituti­onal damages, general damages, aggravated damages, and exemplary damages.

Besides medical evaluation­s, the claimants, who are represente­d by attorney-at-law Jacqueline Samuels-Brown, will draw on the public defender’s report, as well as air-quality studies, as evidence during the hearing.

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