Jamaica Gleaner

St Catherine water supply scheme woes spark clash between mayor and MP

- Ruddy Mathison/Gleaner Writer ruddy.mathison@gleanerjm.com

ADEVELOPIN­G feud between Member of Parliament (MP) for West Central St Catherine Dr Christophe­r Tufton and Norman Scott, chairman of t he St Catherine Municipal Corporatio­n, has erupted following complaints from residents about the ineffectiv­e implementa­tion of the Government-funded $140-million Watermount Rural Water Supply Scheme, commission­ed into service in March of last year.

During a heated town hall meeting held at the Watermount Primary School last Wednesday, Tufton lambasted Scott, who is also the mayor of Spanish Town, for allegedly neglecting his fiduciary responsibi­lities. Tufton accused the mayor of failing to manage, maintain, and expand the water supply system.

The scheme, aimed at benefiting approximat­ely 7,000 residents across several communitie­s, including Watermount, Pedro, Old Works, Mendez, Black Pastures, Cudjoe Hill, and Brown’s Hall, has fallen short of expectatio­ns, according to disgruntle­d residents.

Residents aired grievances over the lack of promised expansions, inconsiste­nt water supply to connected homes, and delays in establishi­ng connection­s for thousands who had already made downpaymen­ts. Receipts displayed by some residents at the meeting indicated payments made months ago to the St Catherine Municipal Corporatio­n with no progress so far.

Expressing his frustratio­n, Tufton directed criticism towards Scott and the St Catherine Municipal Corporatio­n, especially regarding Scott’s handling of the Point Hill division that he has assumed responsibi­lity for since the death of the sitting councillor, Wesley Suckoo.

“We need to put pressure on the municipal corporatio­n and indeed Mayor Scott,” Tufton told attendees at the town hall meeting.

He continued: “It is important because the water system has been under the control of the municipal corporatio­n and Mayor Scott since it was commission­ed.”

He argued that Scott held control over resources allocated to the Point Hill division which the mayor has had responsibi­lity for since Suckoo’s death five years ago.

“The resources that Mr Suckoo would have gotten, although limited sometimes, Mayor Scott should have used to deal with some of the residents’ concerns,” Tufton argued.

POLITICAL INFLUENCE

He noted that Scott, a member of the Opposition People’s National Party, could be influenced by opposing political views, but, if this was a motivation for denying the residents the right to running water, that was not how democracy should function.

However, Scott swiftly rebutted Tufton’s accusation­s, placing the responsibi­lity for any deficiency in providing resources to the division on the allocation process controlled by the Ministry of Local Government and Community Developmen­t.

Scott dismissed any suggestion of political influence and emphasised that financial constraint­s were hindering further infrastruc­ture developmen­t, adding that he has submitted an estimate to the relevant agency but is uncertain about t he progress.

Regarding allegation­s of inadequate maintenanc­e, management of the system and failure to expand the water supply to the lanes and communitie­s raised by Rural Water Supply Ltd, the agency mandated to carry out inspection­s, Scott addressed the matter in a letter dated December 1, 2023, a copy of which The Gleaner was able to obtain.

In the letter, Scott attributed the non-response to ongoing changes within the municipal corporatio­n’s leadership. He assured that efforts would be made to rectify residents’ downpaymen­t concerns, possibly before the l ocal government elections.

Two months later, however, the elections were called for February 26 and the concerns of the residents have not yet been resolved.

In response to Tufton’s assertions, Scott urged the MP to engage directly with the minister of local government, Desmond McKenzie, whom he claimed has taken responsibi­lity for allocation of resources to vacant divisions away from the municipal level.

“The minister sits in his office in Kingston and decides how allocation­s are made to these divisions, so the MP trying to blame me is misinforma­tion. I told him when he approached me on the issue to speak to his minister,” Scott asserted.

The Gleaner understand­s, however, that Tufton wrote to McKenzie on February, asking the minister to intervene in the matter, “as the impression is being created that it is the government represente­d by you and the Member of Parliament that is responsibl­e for the suffering of the citizens caused by the lack of action by Mayor Scott and the St Catherine Municipal Authority”.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Local Government Minister Desmond McKenzie (centre) flanked by Norman Scott (right), chairman of the St Catherine Municipal Corporatio­n, and Dr Christophe­r Tufton, member of parliament for St Catherine West Central, when they turned on the water in Watermount in March of last year.
CONTRIBUTE­D Local Government Minister Desmond McKenzie (centre) flanked by Norman Scott (right), chairman of the St Catherine Municipal Corporatio­n, and Dr Christophe­r Tufton, member of parliament for St Catherine West Central, when they turned on the water in Watermount in March of last year.

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