Jamaica Gleaner

Develop rural towns to address urban drift, McKenzie tells mayors.

- Paul Clarke/Gleaner Writer paul.clarke@gleanerjm.com

JAMAICA’S URBAN centres, like those in other English-speaking Caribbean countries, are fast becoming overpopula­ted as a result of the movement of people from rural areas, thus putting a strain on social amenities and physical infrastruc­ture, says Local Government Minister Desmond McKenzie.

McKenzie told a gathering of regional mayors in Kingston that while urban drift continues to be a challenge worth inspecting, it was now time that local government­s in the region began to look at the developmen­t of semi-urban spaces to tackle the growing problem.

“It is very important that as a region we look at how to negate the flight to urban centres, whether or not we start developing towns and communitie­s to make them into semi-urban centres,” said McKenzie at the first Caribbean Conference of Mayors held at the University of The West Indies, Mona Regional Headquarte­rs yesterday.

“This is one of the things that this administra­tion is looking at; how we can now start to create more cities to prevent this influx from coming into Kingston, Spanish Town, Portmore and places like Montego Bay and Falmouth,” McKenzie told The Gleaner.

He added that one of the ways in which regional local government­s could avoid urban drift was to sever ties to the financiall­y overburden­ed central government to become independen­t authoritie­s in the generation of their own revenue.

GENERATE REVENUE

‘It is time that we extricate ourselves from the pockets of central government by becoming more relevant when it comes on to generating our own sources of revenue,” advised McKenzie.

The three-day conference was conceptual­ised by Kingston Mayor, Senator Delroy Williams, and is being held under the theme ‘Honouring the Past, Embracing a Smart Future’.

Williams noted that while the redevelopm­ent of Kingston remains a dream in many respects, it was important to make Kingston a smart city.

“I think that at the moment, all the factors to transform the City of Kingston is coming together at the right time,” stated Williams.

He also pointed to the protection of the shoreline as another vital part of plans in transformi­ng the city, noting that this was already under way.

“Safeguardi­ng the shoreline against further erosion in certain places will begin in a year’s time and ... this will aid in the redevelopm­ent of downtown,” said Williams.

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 ?? LIONEL ROOKWOOD/PH OTOGRAPHER ?? Desmond McKenzie (left), minister of local government and community developmen­t, listens attentivel­y to Senator Delroy Williams (right), mayor of Kingston, as he talks with Wayne Messam (second right), mayor of Miramar, Florida, USA, and Michael...
LIONEL ROOKWOOD/PH OTOGRAPHER Desmond McKenzie (left), minister of local government and community developmen­t, listens attentivel­y to Senator Delroy Williams (right), mayor of Kingston, as he talks with Wayne Messam (second right), mayor of Miramar, Florida, USA, and Michael...

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