On the day St George’s College teachers gave the school’s administration a deadline to get its act in order concerning infrastructural concerns, a fresh issue came flooding in, prompting the educators to consider industrial action today.
Yesterday’s school day was a tale of two problems. According to the Trinidad and Tobago Unified Teachers’ Association (TTUTA), after suffering sweltering heat registering almost 36 degrees Celsius in classrooms during the morning period, when the rains came in the afternoon, parts of the school were flooded out.
A video posted to Facebook by a former teacher at the institution showed water gushing into corridors, while students stood on chairs to protect their feet, with others looking on pensively, seemingly marooned in their classrooms.
The Barataria institution was recently re-opened for the new academic year after renovations which spanned almost two years and cost taxpayers around $10 million.
Safraz Ali, a former educator at the school, said he and other past students were deeply disturbed by this latest development, something they had not seen in their many years at the institution.
“There are past members of the college who are very incensed to see this happen to St George’s College. In their entire lifetime they have never seen this happen. And it clearly shows some sort of mismanagement,” he lamented.
Ali, who has a nephew at the school, said he was further perplexed when he heard officials refused to dismiss classes early.
“Some parents were very scared for their children when they saw the video on social media, the volume of water coming into the school and the kids marooned in the corridor. Some wanted to take their children out before things got worse,” he added.
Seeking to assuage concerns, however, Education Minister Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly said it was not unusual in the rainy season for heavy, sustained rainfall to cause flooding at some schools. She said help would be given to the institution to recover from yesterday’s events.
“The Facilities Department will liaise with the school to determine if assistance is required for clean-up, as has been required at schools in some instances. They will also determine possible causes and mitigation strategies,” the minister said via WhatsApp message.
Gadsby-Dolly explained that in 2022, when St George’s was temporarily relocated to the University of Trinidad and Tobago’s (UTT) Valsayn Campus, the ministry had to intervene in a similar flooding situation at that location.
“So yes, flooding is one of the challenges with school operation in the rainy season; and the relevant department of the MoE will deal with it, as is usual,” she said.
Gadsby-Dolly also noted that the Mt Hope Secondary School faced a similar situation with flooding yesterday and they too will receive the same assistance.
But TTUTA is not at all comforted by her words.
TTUTA Industrial Relations officer Kevyn Kerr said the minister’s explanation was poor and shows a lack of foresight and preparedness.
Adding insult to injury at St George’s, TTUTA president Martin Lum Kin said, “We also understand this ceiling in the hall, which cost taxpayers quite a tidy sum of money, showed signs of leaking.”
Lum Kin queries the institution’s readiness for the commencement of the new academic year.
“What is even more obscene is there was this huge hype and public relations in the reopening of the school, which was clearly not ready for the occupation of staff and students,” he added.
This seems to be the last straw for the union, which gave the school until yesterday to sort out its transitional issues.
Lum Kin said the teachers have been advised to wear red today and vacate the compound for the duration of their lunch break as a form of protest.
Barataria/San Juan MP Saddam Hosein is also now calling for Gadsby-Dolly to account for the $10 million spent on the school’s refurbishment. He accused the minister of playing politics with the school’s future.
“What we witnessed at this school at the beginning of the new school term, was a Minister of Education attempting to formally open a school with little or no accessories for a classroom, that makes it conducive to learning; and therefore, this latest flooding problem is inexcusable on the part of the minister,” Hosein asserted.
Hosein is now insisting the minister bring a speedy resolution to what he called a distressing situation, which he believes will undoubtedly impede the education of the school’s students.