Jamaica Gleaner

Phillips declares Holness not welcome when Troy bridge reopens in Manchester

- Tamara Bailey/Gleaner Writer

MEMBER OF Parliament for Manchester North Western Mikael Phillips has sounded an alarm, charging that Prime Minister Andrew Holness’ presence is unwelcome at any ribbon cutting ceremony when work to replace the collapsed Troy bridge has been completed.

The more-than-decade-old bridge, now dubbed the “Troy death trap”, collapsed in August 2021, displacing hundred on students, motorists, and residents.

Phillips has long bemoaned what he considers the Government’s sluggish response to having the bridge replaced, noting specifical­ly the inconvenie­nce caused for stakeholde­rs along the north west Manchester and southern Trelawny border.

He has also claimed that students were forced to switch schools, citing parents’ reluctance and concern around having their children traverse the river via makeshift ziplines.

“The people dem sey fi tell the prime minister say when the bridge done, nuh come up dey come cut nuh ribbon, and smile wid dem, like him did know how dem did a suffer. Ah sorry him never inna Parliament the day fi him get [the message]. Nuh come up dey!” said Phillips.

Phillips said his calls for a temporary structure have also fallen on deaf ears.

“Him nuh fi come up dey, because six months ago he stood in Parliament and told me that he was coming up there to see and experience what the people were experienci­ng, and six months gone and up to now, he has not come to see what is happening up there,” said Phillips, who was addressing a divisional conference at the Toll Gate Primary and Infant School on Sunday.

According to Phillips, since the bridge collapsed, three young children almost drowned, among other woes.

“The banking a wash wey more, the teachers still a fi travel an extra nearly seven miles to go school, the minister of education who said she would have looked into it and give them a little stipend for the extra gas, has not done it, the little bus that wi did beg them, that if rain fall and the pikney dem cyaa cross the river, they can get home – the pikney dem still a sleep on the Trelawny side. It’s a shame how we are treating our own people,” said Philips.

The 1869 Troy bridge sits along the western Manchester and southern Trelawny border.

 ?? PHOTO BY NATHANIEL STEWART ?? Mikael Phillips, member of parliament for Manchester North Western, delivers a message to Prime Minister Andrew Holness that the disgruntle­d members of his constituen­cy, who are still awaiting the repair of the Troy bridge, are advising him not to turn up to any ribbon cutting when the repairs are completed. Phillips was addressing a Toll Gate divisional conference on Sunday evening at Toll Gate Primary and Infant School in Clarendon.
PHOTO BY NATHANIEL STEWART Mikael Phillips, member of parliament for Manchester North Western, delivers a message to Prime Minister Andrew Holness that the disgruntle­d members of his constituen­cy, who are still awaiting the repair of the Troy bridge, are advising him not to turn up to any ribbon cutting when the repairs are completed. Phillips was addressing a Toll Gate divisional conference on Sunday evening at Toll Gate Primary and Infant School in Clarendon.

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