Jamaica Gleaner

Forestry sets timeline to confirm boundary for ecological gem

- P.W.R.

THE FORESTRY Department is looking to provide a detailed descriptio­n of the announced boundary for the Cockpit Country within two years.

The revelation was made by Chief Executive Officer and Conservato­r of Forests Marilyn Headley, who noted the requiremen­t for ground truth.

“We have scheduled it that it should be completed in two years,” she noted. “What we know for sure is that we are starting in this new financial year.”

Alicia Edwards, forest resource informatio­n management manager, explained the process of gathering ground truth.

“Ground truth is empirical evidence that you collect on the ground as against what you deduce from any in-house system or process such as a drawing on the computer or other data that does not show what is happening now,” she said.

“When we are at that step (ground truth), we would have actually set up base stations and sur veying equipment to ac tually establish monuments (markers used by surveyors to mark the boundary for any enclosed feature being captured, such as a land parcel) along the boundary,” she said.

“We would mark it until we have completed the legally identified boundary that would be referred to as the Cockpit boundary from a legal perspectiv­e,” Edwards said further.

Up to recently, the Forestry Department was finalising the compositio­n of the team to do the work and the required budget.

“We will need a diverse, qualified team of surveyors and a commission­ed land surveyor,”said Edwards. After they do their work, legislatio­n will follow. “The critical thing is to translate the recommenda­tion of the boundary into an actual boundar y, and then, once the boundar y is identified, that is what will be given over to the legal arm in the Government for the gazetting and declaratio­n,” she told The Gleaner.

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