The national concern with vagrancy is older than the Mental Health Act Chapter 28:02, enacted by the People's National Movement (PNM) Government in 1975. This Act was principally intended to empower the government administrations to successfully address the dangers to the public and the needs of the homeless who abide in public places.
Over the span of more than 36 years, while central and local governments came and went, the Port-of-Spain City Corporation, in particular, steadfastly remained PNM controlled. This had little or no impact on the unhoused, despite the fact that the corporation and the then central government were of the same political persuasion, although this might conceivably have made a difference in the speed of the solution.
The last recorded attempt to grapple with the issue was by Mayor Louis Lee Sing, more than one year ago, when some 177 street dwellers were removed, charged with loitering and placed before the courts for magistrates to determine who needed medical, psychiatric or rehabilitative assistance.
Magistrate Lucina Cardenas-Ragoonanan, before whom some appeared, applauded the efforts of the corporation, but lamented the paucity of social programmes and facilities available to the persons so charged to permanently keep them off the streets. In fact, a representative from the Centre for Socially displaced persons told the court that at that time, there were only 13 spaces available for referral!
On that occasion, however, Dr Lincoln Douglas, Minister of State in the Ministry of the People and Social Development, stated: "What Mayor Lee Sing has done is not part of the ministry's plan for solving the issue on a long-term basis."
He also indicated that he had met with Mayor Lee Sing on the issue and had informed him of the best practices in which to engage.
In response, the mayor remained adamant that the corporation did what it thought was necessary and promised to take the socially displaced off the streets every week until they were removed permanently thereafter. He said that he acted quickly in doing so as there was no telling how long it would be before the ministry's plan took effect. He also complained that there was too much red tape on fundamental issues regarding the homeless.
The chamber appreciates and empathises with Mayor Lee Sing's frustration so long as he broke no law.In our experience, each ministry is overflowing with plans, studies, reports, analyses, theses: paper, paper and more paper but with comparatively little or no action to address this scourge.Just like crime it must be the subject, object and topic of the most over studied national issue by every central government committee appointed by each government of the day up to the one ending with Professor Selwyn Ryan, in September this year, who is to report to Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar on the causes of criminality including "at risk" males.
It came as no surprise to the chamber when, in early October, Mayor Lee Sing held a press conference to present to the public Cheryl Ann Alexander and Michelle Brewster, the latest victims of attacks by street dwellers. Not too long after, another woman was reportedly viciously attacked and sexually assaulted while walking along Frederick Street, for which the homeless man received a four-year prison sentence.
In response to these latest attacks by street dwellers, Minister of the People, Dr Glenn Ramadharsingh, denied being contacted by the mayor and accused the latter of not attempting to collaborate with ministries.Ramadarsingh is reported in the T&T Guardian to be not perturbed, but promised to deal with the matter in a holistic manner and to roll out a plan in the next three weeks.
The chamber waits with bated breath to ascertain whether pedestrians will at last be able to conduct their business, freely walking all our thoroughfares, without the fear of assault by such street dwellers, over the busy pre-Christmas shopping period as Ramadarsingh proposed.
The repeated occurrence of such assaults, while the Government ponders a holistic approach (as Ministers Ramadarsingh and Douglas repeatedly stressed), impacts on the image of T&T and its ability to look after those of its citizens least able to look after themselves. The shortcoming also impacts negatively on the tourism thrust and thus, diversification efforts, all outside the remit of the private sector.
If continual inaction on street dwellers is all we witness for Christmas, the credibility and justification for the latest award from the European Union Council on tourism and trade will be further diluted.Consequently, we call on Ministers Ramdarsingh and Douglas to take the lead, enact what the People's Partnership manifesto promised about unifying the forces of good over evil to successfully address vagrancy once and for all.
It must also include the provision of all resources for immediate implementation by their ministry and each regional corporation, including that in PoS, so that previous victims, like Sharifa Walker, who is 95 per cent blind in her left eye, may find some consolation in the suffering they must continue to endure for the rest of their lives, while we all benefit from the sacrifices they made so that the Government to finally overcome the continual dangers posed by vagrants to those who use our public spaces.
T&T CHAMBER OF INDUSTRY& COMMERCE
www.chamber.org.tt