Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Troy farmers to benefit from $106-m road projects

- BY HORACE HINES Observer West reporter

Two road rehabilita­tion projects, funded mainly by the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank (CDB) at a combined cost of roughly $106 million in Common Road and Starapple Lane, both in Troy, Trelawny, have been described by residents as “the best thing to have ever happened in the respective communitie­s.”

The Common Road project was funded at a cost of $67.3 million, with a contributi­on of $2.8 million from community members, while the Starapple Lane project was done at a cost of $39.1million, including $1.4 million in community contributi­on.

The projects were facilitate­d by the Jamaica Social Investment Fund (JSIF).

President of the Troy Community Developmen­t

Committee (CDC), Kedon Glaves, explained that above all, farmers stand to benefit most from the road improvemen­ts.

“It is the best thing that ever happened in both communitie­s,” the 30-year-old teacher and justice of the peace expressed during the handing-over ceremony held at the Troy High School on Tuesday.

He told the Jamaica Observer West that “farmers who tend to sell their produce had to use their donkeys to travel several miles to meet vendors to sell their produce to go to market and stuff. But the persons who are buying the produce now can go directly beside the farm to pick up the produce.”

Similar sentiments were shared by another resident, Kacia Dennis Brown.

“This is the best thing I ever see happening on Starapple Lane because during rainfall it was not a nice sight. I actually raise pigs and when the water runs from the road with the marl, it actually kills my piglets.

Since it (project) is completed we actually start raising our pigs again,” Dennis Brown told the Observer West.

General manager of finance and procuremen­t at JSIF, Orville Hill, who was also speaking at the handing-over ceremony on Tuesday, noted that of the 1,400 citizens being served by the infrastruc­ture developmen­ts in both communitie­s, 35 per cent are farmers.

“We are cognisant that these roadways play a vital role in creating access to a large investment in agricultur­al production, with the main produce being yam. It also provides a roadway for increased access to the market, increasing the buying power for farmers and even increasing land value in the communitie­s,” Hill stated.

He noted that these roads were last rehabilita­ted over four decades ago and their deteriorat­ion affected “the livelihood­s of residents, most importantl­y the farmers”.

“I take this opportunit­y to applaud our funding partner, the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank (CDB), for this worthwhile financial support in the form of a grant,” Hill stressed.

Chairman of the Trelawny Municipal Corporatio­n and mayor of Falmouth, Councillor C Junior Gager, thanked JSIF for the road developmen­t projects.

Common Road and Starapple Lane were the two of nine roads submitted in the Troy Division that met the criteria for the JSIF site inspection and collaborat­ion.

“The Trelawny Municipal Corporatio­n registers our sincere gratitude to Jamaica Social Investment Fund for this significan­t investment in increasing our road infrastruc­ture to meet developmen­t demands in this parish,” said Councillor Gager (Jamaica Labour Party, Warsop Division).

“Trelawny plays a very important role in nation-building and this parish has maintained its relevance of being a major catalyst for the stimulatio­n of roads for sustainabl­e developmen­t under the Trelawny Local Sustainabl­e Developmen­t plan, which is a tool by the local authority to manage all the growth and the developmen­t of the parish,” Gager said.

The scope of the developmen­t, among other things, included the rehabilita­tion of the road surface with an adequate drainage system. The projects, which started early in October, were completed earlier this year.

Hill noted that “five members from each community participat­ed in our maintenanc­e training, which provided the basic informatio­n needed for the upkeep of the roadway”.

“Each community was also provided with a maintenanc­e kit for this purpose, I therefore, urge you to take the necessary steps to maintain the road surfaces, drains and as well as the beautifica­tion of the area,” Hill implored.

 ?? (Photo: Philp Lemonte) ?? From left: Deputy Mayor of Falmouth Donovan White; Lavern Morris, superinten­dent of road and work at the Trelawny Municipal Corporatio­n; Councillor Garth Wilkinson (People’s National Party, Falmouth Division); Mayor of Falmouth Councillor C Junior Gager; general manager of finance and procuremen­t at JSIF Orville Hill; Daintyann
Barrett Smith, project manager at JSIF; president of the Troy Community Developmen­t Committee (CDC) Kedon Glaves; Aubyn Green, zone team leader at the National Water Commission; and Councillor Jonathan Bartley (Jamaica Labour Party, Wakefield Division) participat­e in the ribbon-cutting exercise during the handing over of the rehabilita­ted Common Road in Troy on Tuesday.
(Photo: Philp Lemonte) From left: Deputy Mayor of Falmouth Donovan White; Lavern Morris, superinten­dent of road and work at the Trelawny Municipal Corporatio­n; Councillor Garth Wilkinson (People’s National Party, Falmouth Division); Mayor of Falmouth Councillor C Junior Gager; general manager of finance and procuremen­t at JSIF Orville Hill; Daintyann Barrett Smith, project manager at JSIF; president of the Troy Community Developmen­t Committee (CDC) Kedon Glaves; Aubyn Green, zone team leader at the National Water Commission; and Councillor Jonathan Bartley (Jamaica Labour Party, Wakefield Division) participat­e in the ribbon-cutting exercise during the handing over of the rehabilita­ted Common Road in Troy on Tuesday.

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