Jamaica Gleaner

Where Bernard Lodge and Heroes Park converge

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IT IS not often that this newspaper is in concert with the Jamaica Agricultur­al Society (JAS), which hasn’t sufficient­ly, or with clarity, articulate­d a strategic vision for a modern farming sector. They tend to be animated by small-bore issues.

However, last week’s statement by the JAS president, Lenworth Fulton, about the absence, by the Government, of a credible land-use policy, and the accelerati­ng expropriat­ion of the island’s most arable lands for real estate developmen­t, is on the button. It deserves support.

It is a pity that Audley Shaw, the minister for commerce and agricultur­e, usually so loquacious on almost any subject, has apparently lost his voice on this issue, despite his declared concern, when he first got the job, for the amount of idle lands in Jamaica. He wanted to improve food security, lower the country’s near US$800 million food-import bill, and create jobs in agricultur­e and agro-processing sectors.

Mr Fulton’s focus at the launch of Farmers’ Month was what is happening on the plains of St Catherine, home of some of the country’s most fertile lands and irrigation systems. Much of the land used to be under sugar cane, but, as that industry faltered, real estate developmen­ts moved in.

ACTIVE PLAN

Matters are about to get worse. There is an active plan for a logistic facility in the Caymanas region. A stalled housing developmen­t on several hundred acres at Bernard Lodge is poised to be restarted by Chinese interests.

Further, the Holness administra­tion is pushing ahead with its planned seizure of 4,600 acres of these arable lands for a new city. Some of the lands have already been sold, or are in the process of being sold to private developers. Farmers who leased portions are being chucked off and shunted to other sections.

As Mr Fulton pointed out, 63 per cent of Jamaica is not suitable for agricultur­e. Flip the numbers and it means that 37 per cent of the land is sufficient­ly arable and meets the other characteri­stics necessary to sustain agricultur­e. But according to Mr Fulton, only about 19.5 per cent of the arable land is now available for farming, with most of the reduction taking place in the last 50 years.

Rightly, he wants a land-use policy and a halt to the subsuming of arable lands into housing and urban infrastruc­ture. “We recommend that pending and future housing developmen­ts and urban expansion make use of marginal lands,” Mr Fulton said. We say bravo!

The concerns raised by Mr Fulton are not disconnect­ed from the country’s shelter crisis and the debate over urban renewal, including the Holness Administra­tion’s intention to build a government campus around the 50-acre National Heroes Park, and a new parliament building inside it.

In the past, Jamaica has mostly attempted to address the problem of housing with new developmen­ts away from urban centres, often on arable lands.

There has been little attempt at a holistic and sustained urban renewal. When it happens, it is with insufficie­nt attention to the needs of existing residents, which we fear will be the likely outcome with the proposed Heroes Park project.

In today’s world, parliament­s, as gathering places for large number of representa­tives of the State and Government, demand a significan­t amount of security.

They do not easily lend themselves to being places of leisure and recreation.

In that regard, not only will the communitie­s surroundin­g National Heroes Park, with the advent of the Parliament there, have limited recreation­al space, but likely limited, or less free, access to the acreage that remains.

As we said previously, the Bantustan idea of 23 micro parks in the communitie­s won’t compensate for the loss of Heroes Park. CONCERNS NOT DISCONNECT­ED

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