Jamaica Gleaner

Unanswered questions on Dry Harbour quarrying

- THE EDITOR, Madam:

IRESEARCHE­D more about limestone supply in Trelawny and St Ann, and found out that: • All limestone between Discovery Bay and Falmouth is essentiall­y the same.

• There is excess capacity among existing quarries to comfortabl­y meet local demand for limestone, i ncluding to satisfy large-scale future developmen­ts.

• Active quarries are sited in locations which have no adverse effect on neighbours.

• Less than a dozen shipments of limestone leave Reynold’s Pier in Ocho Rios each year; annual economic value derived is dwarfed by two cruise ship calls.

• Cross-contaminat­ion i ssues reduce the likelihood of bauxite and limestone being shipped from ports where l oading infrastruc­ture is shared.

I question how lucrative the mining of the Dry Harbour Mountain would be in practice, unless directors of Bengal Developmen­t Limited have secured an unusually large and as yet undeclared limestone contract abroad. The 100 jobs slated for Rio Bueno through this foreign investment would be offset in equal number by the sacrifice of establishe­d, long-term touristrel­ated jobs in the area.

If new demand for limestone were to appear, why not allow existing local quarries to create more jobs and leverage their excess capacity? The economic gain would be matched – then vastly overtaken – in terms of the net public gain from not upsetting communitie­s and the environmen­t.

Quarrying might, however, be an efficient back-door means of bypassing national planning constraint­s for future commercial­residentia­l developmen­t. Who would object to developmen­t once land is barren, ecosystems erased and groundwate­r disrupted for millennia?

To build on the Dry Harbour Mountain would not be permitted otherwise. It would constitute sporadic developmen­t, with no infrastruc­ture to support it. Under Jamaican planning law, this area is designated, and should never be considered for developmen­t – like national parks in the United States, or the Green Belt around London.

In order to conserve resources, good sustainabl­e planning practice seeks to consolidat­e and build out existing designated residentia­l areas, where the commerce, jobs and infrastruc­ture to support them are already establishe­d. There are many such places: Coral Springs, Stonebrook and Hague Housing Developmen­ts around Falmouth, Duncan’s Bay, Duncan’s Heights, Harmony Cove, Belle Air, Vista Heights and Cardiff Hall in Runaway Bay – nowhere near their full capacity.

The facts and narrative do not equate, and our country is calling on decision-makers for greater transparen­cy.

FIONA LEE EVANS

Rio Bueno

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