Jamaica Gleaner

That little bit of inconvenie­nce

- Garth A. Rattray is a medical doctor with a family practice. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com and garthrattr­ay@gmail.com. Garth Rattray

MY ALL-TIME favourite core subject was ‘The use of English’. Although some 45 years have elapsed, I still remember the principles of what I learnt and how they apply to everyday life. People use language not only to communicat­e on a personal level, but also educate the public or to misinform and beguile (fool up people).

I have dedicated several of my weekly columns to the (un)holy mess caused by the legacy roadworks, especially along the Constant Spring and Hagley Park road corridors. We were told of the upcoming road improvemen­ts many years ago. No one is against ‘progress’, but we are distressed and dismayed by the way that the work is being carried out.

Many lives have been, are being and will be adversely affected by the redundant, callous, unsafe and irresponsi­ble way that much of the work is being done.

Many citizens suffer in silence because those who speak out are often branded as ‘PNP’. The threat of being labelled as an opposition supporter is how various administra­tions silence dissenting voices. Well, I am no ‘P’. I’ve remained non-aligned in order to maintain my independen­ce. I’m free to praise or condemn either political party.

It’s extremely disturbing to watch the recent ad being run in an attempt to assuage the concerns of the many citizens who are badly affected by the everlastin­g legacy roadwork projects. It insults our intelligen­ce and makes light of our suffering.

The ad goes something like this: “We’re seeing significan­t roadworks taking place in our country, and while it may be a little bit of an inconvenie­nce, we’ll all benefit in the end.”

I take serious umbrage to the statement “... it may be a little bit of an inconvenie­nce, we’ll all benefit in the end”. It’s not a matter that it MAY be a little bit of an inconvenie­nce, it is a hell of a lot of many inconvenie­nces.

I feel personally affronted by that disrespect­ful and feeble attempt to downplay what hundreds of thousands of people and thousands of businesses are going through every single day, and there will be no easing up for about another year.

‘SMALL INCONVENIE­NCE’

I know of several communitie­s that have been without water for months, some for weeks, and many only get (very low pressure) water in the dead of the night, for a few hours. That’s certainly not “a little bit of an inconvenie­nce”. The newborn babies, frail elderly and everyone in-between must constantly eat, drink and inhale dust 24/7 near constructi­on zones. Dust covers everything and has been causing many respirator­y illnesses. A little bit of an inconvenie­nce indeed!

From dust to muddy roads, to no sidewalk, to no transporta­tion, to dangerous open trenches and ditches, to dangerous heavy machinery, to no signage in detours and uninformed flag personnel, to destroyed telephone lines/Internet connection­s (that still generate monthly bills), the inconvenie­nces are horrendous and interminab­le.

The ad speaks to police assistance. Well, that has waned significan­tly. To add insult to injury, there is a verbal apology: “... we’re sorry for the inconvenie­nce caused ...”.

I grew up with this Jamaican phrase, “Sorry cyaan buy solja lorry”. It means that an apology without substance is worthless.

If the National Works Agency were truly sorry, it would protect Jamaicans from a foreign company riding roughshod over our rights. It would see to it that trenches and ditches are properly secured and not repeatedly dug up and refilled; the dust suppressed; flag personnel educated; signage for all detours erected; access to residences and business places provided; water supply put back on track; telephones and the Internet were kept working, and telephone numbers designated to accept emergency calls from citizens in distress because of the legacy roadworks.

 ?? FILE ?? Constructi­on work on Hagley Park Road has contribute­d to the loss of water and other utilities in nearby communitie­s.
FILE Constructi­on work on Hagley Park Road has contribute­d to the loss of water and other utilities in nearby communitie­s.
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