Jamaica Gleaner

NSWMA launches major waste management project in Hanover

- Bryan Miller/Gleaner Writer

ANOVEL, three-prong solid waste reduction project was on Thursday launched in the Chambers Pen community in western Hanover by the National Solid Waste Management Authority (NSWMA), in collaborat­ion with its western regional arm, the Western Parks and Market Waste Management Limited.

The project is also being supported by the Jamaica Agricultur­al Society, the Rural Agricultur­al Developmen­t Authority, Jamaica Cultural Developmen­t Commission, the Social Developmen­t Commission, and HEART/NSTA.

It involves a community competitio­n in composting, plastic bottle separation from household waste, and the proper containeri­sation of household waste.

According to Aretha McFarlane, operations director at the NSWMA, the objective of the project is to educate all participan­ts about the techniques of composting, with a view to having the farmers and community members actively involved in solid waste reduction.

HOLISTIC APPROACH

With over 60 garbage drums distribute­d to community members for both garbage storage and composting activities under the project, McFarlane said the NSWMA has taken a holistic approach in Chambers Pen to deal with the garbage situation.

“We will have prizes and surprises in the competitio­n aspect of the project, where areas in the community will be competing against each other in the composting and plastic bottle separation aspects,”McFarlane told members of the community in selling the idea to them.

Among the prizes at stake for the various winners are garden tools, chickens and chicken feed, water tanks, a deep freezer, and a weekend for two at a hotel.

“We (at the NSWMA) want this project

to be sustainabl­e because there are benefits, not only for you now, but even after the competitio­n, while you (community members) want a clean, safe and healthy environmen­t in which to live, to grow your children and to enjoy your everyday life,” said McFarlane.

Audley Gordon, the executive director of the NSWMA, who spoke at the launch, noted that a high percentage of garbage being generated in homes is compostabl­e, adding that the process of composting is one of the easiest ways to achieve a reduction in solid waste.

“When we compost, we achieve the reducing (of solid waste), we achieve the

reusing and we achieve the recycling,” noted Gordon.

According to Gordon, the project is being launched in Chambers Pen with a view to extending it across Jamaica, based on the impact it should have on that community.

“With a small investment of time (in composting), you can contribute to the solution of the country’s waste management problem,” stated Gordon, adding that, nationally, 67 per cent of the volume of garbage which is being packaged and left for collection at gates, is compostabl­e.

While outlining the cost input for transporti­ng garbage to disposal sites, Gordon said that, at a cursory glance, the numbers are showing the possibilit­y of huge savings if people start to practise composting within their households.

“Just a cursory glance at the numbers, it is showing up a savings of close to $2 billion a year for taxpayers, were we to get composting going. That figure is reflective of the smaller amount of disposal sites that we would maintain, the fewer trucks and workers that we would need, therefore we do ourselves, as a country, a favour when we compost,” emphasised Gordon. general election when they swept the entire parish.

“I think the people have seen what is happening and will react and come out and vote this time … it was not a case where there were more JLP than PNP in the general election, it was a case where the PNP supporter did not go out and vote,” said Moore.

In the last local government election in 2016, the PNP won nine of the 14 seats in the WMC. However, two seats are currently vacant as Valdence Gifford, who represente­d the PNP in the Whitehouse division, resigned in March of 2020; while George Wright, who was the JLP councillor for the Petersfiel­d division, contested the Westmorela­nd Central seat in the September 2020 general election and resigned to take his seat in the higher office.

Dr Karl Blythe, former MP for Westmorela­nd Central, who was one of the major forces when the PNP dominated the parish, is of the view that the George Wright saga regarding the alleged abuse of his partner Tanesha Singh, has been a blotch on the JLP while the impeccable record of the Bertel Mooreled Westmorela­nd Municipal Corporatio­n should give the PNP a special bounce.

“The George Wright situation gave us a little door to go back into the hearts of the people,” said Blythe. “They were very disappoint­ed with him as a JLP member of parliament so in general, I expect that will give the whole parish a little more hope in the PNP.”

Like Moore, Cebert McFarlane, of the Leamington division, will also be walking away from representa­tional politics, but Wentworth Skeffery, the PNP’s deputy general secretary, says all 14 councillor candidates for t he i mpending local government election are already in place.

“Where we have councillor­s not returning we would have filled those vacancies and our full team is ready to contest the elections. We are taking the campaign back to basics,” said Skeffery.

The candidates, he said, have been engaging the people, and a canvas of the voters has given the PNP the confidence that Westmorela­nd is in the bag for the Old Hope Road-headquarte­red party.

 ?? FILE ?? Audley Gordon, executive director of the National Solid Waste Management Authority
FILE Audley Gordon, executive director of the National Solid Waste Management Authority

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