?Farmers from Aranguez, Curepe and Cunupia whose fields are earmarked for the proposed new rail lines, have begun mobilising to resist any plan to take away their holdings. "We are not going to give up one inch of land," Norris Deonarine of the National Foodcrop Farmers Association (NFFA) vowed last week. From as early as September last year, affected farmers and residents began receiving letters from the National Infrastructure Development Company (Nidco) informing of Government's plan to gather information about land ownership. One letter, dated September 30, 2009, from Sean McDonnell, project manager of the Trinidad Rapid Rail Project (TRRP) to a Cunupia farmer stated: "The Government has retained the TriniTrain Consortium to undertake planning and preliminary works for the TRRP. "The TRRP is being implemented by Nidco on behalf of the Works Ministry. "As part of the planning works, it is necessary to identify the current owners of land parcels along and adjacent to the proposed route and to obtain some land parcel identification information from them. "ROW Services, a TriniTrain sub-contractor, is charged with gathering this information."
The Government has, thus far, kept the cost of the rail project to itself but the Association of Professional Engineers APETT has estimated it at "tens of billions of dollars." More conservative estimates are between $9 billion and $15 billion. Deonarine said there had been a call from Agriculture Minister Arnold Piggott to farmers to increase production. "And we have done so. A number of young people have gone into agriculture because of the apparent encouragement from the Government. "Now, you have another ministry coming to take agricultural land for projects. "If they intend to pass through farmers' lands, we are calling on the Government to decide which is more important to T&T right now, food or rail. "We want to see development but not at the expense of destroying farmers' livelihoods."
Deonarine said the question of compensation to hundreds of residents and farmers remains unanswered. "Is the Government prepared to fork out millions of dollars in compensation to all who will be displaced by the rail?"
ABOVE: ?Anil Ramnarine, right, president of the Cunupia Farmers' Association with his workers in a pepper field.
Deonarine said Nidco, the executing agent for the rail project, invited residents and farmers to two consultations on the matter and postponed them unceremoniously. "Hundreds of farmers turned up in hired maxis last Monday at the Ministry of Works' Port-of-Spain office for the first consultation only to see a sign on the door stating it was postponed to an unspecified date. "They turned up at Lakshmi Girls' Hindu School in St Augustine the following Tuesday for the second one and met the gates shut. "It was Devant Maharaj from the Maha Sabha who opened the gate and let them in and they held their own consultation." Deonarine is charging that Nidco is not serious about the consultations and was not prepared for that kind of response from farmers.
Farmers: They will destroy us
Several young farmers who may be displaced by the rail were watering their crops or harvesting in their Cunupia fields last Monday. Most of them worked on family plots, some privately owned, some State-owned. Dhanraj Sankar pointed to reserve forest at the back of their fields and wondered why the Government didn't use it for the rail lines. "There are hundreds of farmers in Cunupia. If they displace us they will destroy us. "If they consult with us, we can help them find alternative routes." Tricia Latchman, 30, a mother of two, was reaping cucumbers in a field she cultivates with her husband. She has no idea what she will do if the land is taken. Shawn Latchman, watering his ochroes, said, "This is our bread and butter." Joel Soogrim, 23, only recently started planting but the trainline will pass directly through his field if implemented. Yellow flowers covered Ramesh Ramsaroop's ochroes but the field is also earmarked for the rail line. There are over 300 farmers in the Cunupia Farmers' Association, half of them young men, president Anil Ramnarine said.
As little dislocation as possible
Works Minister Colm Imbert said TriniTrain was hired to design a rail system that will minimise dislocation as far as possible and to consult with people to be affected. "We expect them to come back to us with the best design and then the Government will make a decision," Imbert told the Sunday Guardian. The Minister said he spoke to some Esmeralda residents who suggested that the rail track could be located one mile from the present proposed site. "They also suggested Chin Chin Road could be an access. But we expect the contractor to talk to the people. It's not the Ministry's job." Imbert said there was some misunderstanding about the "so-called consultations", which were postponed by Nidco. He said the meetings were supposed to get public comment on the environmental aspect of the project for a Certificate of Environmental Clearance, nothing more. He said he told Nidco they went about organising the public meetings the wrong way and has asked them to address the matter again observing proper procedures.
Imbert stressed that the rail project is only in the planning stage and there is no bulldozing going on, as some claimed. Agriculture Minister Arnold Piggot met with Cunupia farmers last Wednesday at his Ministry's St Clair office and assured that farmers will be given an opportunity to voice their concerns at upcoming consultations relating to the rail project. Urging farmers not to speculate on any negative outcomes of the upcoming consultations, he said the Government will make every effort to balance the competing claims and interests of its various stakeholders. Piggott gave the assurance that the significant contribution of farmers towards increasing food production will be taken into account. Nidco's communications officer, Majid Mohammed said the consultations were advertised in all the newspapers and fliers were mailed to residents in the Port-of-Spain, St Augustine and Chaguanas areas. He promised that meetings will be rescheduled and the new dates advertised. Asked if Nidco postponed the consultations after not being prepared for such a strong response from farmers and residents, Mohammed replied: "Nidco is prepared for anything." A Nidco Web site describes the status of the rail project as, "On Track."
?Rail routes:
1. Along the East-West and North-South corridors.
2. Will include 10 train stations along the proposed routes.
Rail service will comprise:
1. Two express train lines with a total length of approximately 105 kms.
2. Will operate on an aerial structure (in Port-of-Spain and environs)
3. Will operate on a grade adjacent to or within the median of major roadways outside of Port-of-Spain and environs.
?Nidco facts on the TRRP:
1. A Design-Build-Operate-Maintain (DBOM) contract was signed between the Ministry of Works and Transport, NIDCO, & TriniTrain Consortium in April 2008.
2. TriniTrain Consortium comprises three prominent firms in the Rapid Rail industry: Bouygues Travaux Publics SA, Alstom Transport SA, & RATP D�veloppement SA
3. Phase 1 of the DBOM contract is currently under way and is scheduled for completion in 2010. This phase includes data collection, route selection and preliminary design.
4. Phase 2 involves design and construction.
5. Phase 3 includes operations and maintenance.z