Jamaica Gleaner

Don’t undermine local government

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THE EDITOR, Madam:

THE ALLOCATION of funds to members of parliament (MPs) for the repair of roads and the request of the prime minister for a list of roads in need of repairs directly from the MPs, are underminin­g the importance for local government and governance by the elected parish municipali­ties.

To add insult to injury, the claim by Mikael Phillips, about the inability of MPs to provide such a list by March 31, points to the forgotten role of councillor­s across the varied divisions within the parishes that comprise the governing municipali­ties.

Since the last local government elections, citizens across Jamaica have been complainin­g about the poor conditions of roads. Secondly, as we lead up to this local government election, both political parties have candidates in the divisions campaignin­g for votes and ought to have familiaris­ed themselves with the needs of their respective divisions to serve. Along with this, the basic division of parishes begins with the Social Developmen­t Commission (SDC). The SDC is the Government of Jamaica’s main community mobilisati­on and organisati­on agency working with Jamaica’s 783 communitie­s.The SDC’s overarchin­g strategic objective is to advance the economic developmen­t communitie­s through an integrated community developmen­t strategy. The SDC is positioned in the Ministry of Local Government and Community Developmen­t, sends their reports/ minutes to the minister, and copies to members of parliament. Another level is the parish divisions led by elected councillor­s that comprise the parish municipali­ties under the leadership of the mayor. Hence, the requested list can be made available before the next local government elections.

On the issue of road repairs, the use of asphalt generally guarantees a road life of 18 years. Since the introducti­on of the National Works Agency (NWA) and the involvemen­t of some geneticall­y connected contractor­s, millions of dollars have been wasted fixing roads that last until the next heavy rains.

The people in Manchester have witnessed this, in that, roads that were repaired in 2021 were resurfaced in late 2023. Those funds could have been spent on education and health, if the quality of our roads was not compromise­d in the first place.

If the local municipali­ties are important for governance, then let us stop underminin­g their role and demand of them the required informatio­n that they should have had in the first place – the plight of roads in disrepair across the parishes.

DUDLEY MCLEAN II

Mandeville, Manchester

dm15094@gmail.com

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