Jamaica Gleaner

‘WE ARE NOT SQUATTERS’ – WEISE ROAD RESIDENTS UPSET AT LABEL

Weise Road residents spurn stigma following disaster in unstable Bull Bay

- Corey Robinson Senior Staff Reporter

THEIR HOUSES may be drenched in mud with silt hanging from door curtains and hinges, but residents of hard-hit Weise Road in Bull Bay are proud to call the floodprone riverbank home, defiant even as contractor­s, engineers, and a decorated geologist have dubbed most of the area unstable for building.

While they cleared away the sticky remnants from the Chalky River last Thursday, diehards of the Nine Miles community in St Andrew East Rural also made it clear they were not among those squatter communitie­s recently chided by Member of Parliament Juliet Holness for contributi­ng to the dangers from heavy rainfall.

Land titles were slow in coming, but yard after yard, they asserted their compliance with land taxes and lease agreements over the years. Any suggestion­s of squatting – especially regarding the homes that were hardest hit two weeks ago – are “out of order”, they argued.

“We want you to make it clear that we are no squatters. Everybody on Weise Road has a title or they are paying a lease. Some people over here buy their own land,” charged 74-year-old Carmeta Austin, whose two-storey house also hosts a community shop.

“Tell me now, squatters can build them breed a furniture house here ... and we don’t know when Government a come bulldozer we off? We nuh squatters!” charged the woman, listing food items destroyed as the roaring Chalky River overflowed its banks and flooded her business place.

For years, Austin said she had been paying lease to a now-deceased ‘Miss Walker’, who paid all her taxes. Now it is Miss Walker’s daughter who controls the agreement from overseas, she claimed.

The stories were similar door to door. Some residents, like Marcia Robinson, offered documents she managed to save from the floods as proof of cleared affairs.

She explained that she and her husband purchased the house through the National Housing Trust in 1994 and have been slowly upgrading it. Two weeks ago, however, it was among those on videos that went viral as floodwater­s rushed through her community.

COSTLY CLEAN-UP

So far, administra­tors at the Mount Sinai Sacred Heart Church located on Weise Road said they have spent more than $320,000 in the last two weeks to clean up, having also suffered damage to musical equipment in the deluge.

That figure includes money for cleaning equipment and chemicals, lunches, and payment for church members who have been working tirelessly, lamented Bishop Royston Braham. It didn’t

help that the river broke a water main in the community and so in the absence of the running commodity, they had to use water from their baptism pool to scrub tiles.

Braham rebuked the Government for its neglect of the Chalky River over the years.

“What happened is that the river used to be cleaned (dredged) very often, but for years, that river has not been cleaned; and I’m not just talking about by this Government alone, but the Government before as well. That is why the river came over the way it did,” argued Braham, noting that he has been operating at the Weise Road location for more than half a century.

“People always talk about things that they don’t know anything about. That is the typical Jamaican. When they talk about squatting, they are out of order,” he said.

“Most of the people in this area have titles for their homes. So when people talking about squatters, they just don’t understand,” said the bishop, noting that he has been paying the Government what is due unto them each year in property taxes.

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY NICHOLAS NUNES/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Seventy-four-year-old Carmeta Austin of Weise Road in Bull Bay, St Andrew, said that like her, most of the residents there had either leased or purchased their properties and were not squatters.
PHOTOS BY NICHOLAS NUNES/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Seventy-four-year-old Carmeta Austin of Weise Road in Bull Bay, St Andrew, said that like her, most of the residents there had either leased or purchased their properties and were not squatters.
 ??  ?? Lorna Smith, a member of the Mount Sinai Sacred Heart Church on Weise Road scrapes the floor last Thursday to remove silt washed inside the building as floodwater­s damaged musical equipment amid the disaster in Bull Bay, St Andrew, recently. The church has already spent more than $300,000 on clean-up efforts.
Lorna Smith, a member of the Mount Sinai Sacred Heart Church on Weise Road scrapes the floor last Thursday to remove silt washed inside the building as floodwater­s damaged musical equipment amid the disaster in Bull Bay, St Andrew, recently. The church has already spent more than $300,000 on clean-up efforts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica