Come October 1 there will be more changes to the traffic network in San Fernando.
Speaking at the San Fernando City Corporation’s Statutory Meeting , Mayor Junia Regrello announced that part of Pointe a Pierre Road, one of the main thoroughfares into the heart of San Fernando, will be become a one-way.
Vehicles heading along Pointe a Pierre Road towards High Street will be restricted from proceeding further than Short Street.
This means that vehicles proceeding along Pointe a Pierre Road will now have to access High Street from Short Street, Mon Chagrin or Penitence Streets.
And, delivery trucks will no longer be allowed onto Short Street. The mayor said the traffic changes were done in an attempt to ease the traffic congestion between La Pique Hill and Library Corner.
“Parents dropping their children at Naparima Girls’ Hight Street will have to come up High Street, onto La Pique Hill and exit on the other end. We are trying to make it a sort of roundabout,” Regrello said.
The mayor said all stakeholders were informed of the changes.
In an immediate reaction, head of the Greater San Fernando Chamber of Commerce Kiran Singh said he was not aware of the changes.
Singh, however, said the chamber’s position has always been to find solutions for the traffic gridlock that has been plaguing downtown San Fernando.
He said, “In conjunction with the Mayor and the City Council we acknowledge that traffic initiatives have yielded positive results. We are hoping that this new plan will add to alleviating the traffic flow out of High street.”
Speaking with reporters afterwards, the mayor also dismissed rumours of job losses at the corporation.
He speculated that the rumours may have been politically motivated as the country embarks on the silly season. “I think it is mischievous,” he said.
With Local Government Reform soon to come into effect, he anticipates more job opportunities as the corporation’s operations and system will be expanded.
“I want to give the assurance the San Fernando City Corporation and this administration, this team that I lead, we have no intentions of sending anybody home,” Regrello said.
The main highlight of the meeting, however, was the distribution of a history book detailing the development of San Fernando from the 1500s to the 1900s, written by Michael Anthony, to 12 schools.