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Thursday, May 8, 2025

Beetham residents threaten protest over collapsed road

by

Rishard Khan
1345 days ago
20210831
Beetham Gardens residents view the collapsed roadway in their community yesterday.

Beetham Gardens residents view the collapsed roadway in their community yesterday.

ANISTO ALVES

Fed up Beetham res­i­dents are threat­en­ing protest ac­tion if the au­thor­i­ties do not ad­dress a leak­ing sew­er line in their com­mu­ni­ty which they say is mak­ing their liv­ing con­di­tions near un­in­hab­it­able.

Over the past two weeks, a sec­tion of the Beetham main road has been cav­ing in and raw sew­er­age is leak­ing from an un­der­ground line. The hole, which first be­gan form­ing 16 days ago, now spans al­most 12 feet in length, rough­ly eight feet in width and at least six feet in depth. A clos­er in­spec­tion re­veals a pool of near stag­nant wa­ter eat­ing away the un­der lay­ers of the road­way, with noth­ing more than the as­phalt cling­ing to it­self. 

“Don’t walk there, the whole road could go,” Guardian Me­dia was warned dur­ing a site vis­it yes­ter­day.

Apart from ren­der­ing the road im­pass­able, the pun­gent scent of dirty, stag­nant wa­ter pen­e­trates the air, al­most im­me­di­ate­ly trig­ger­ing the gag re­flex of any­one who wasn’t ex­pect­ing to be greet­ed by it. 

“In any oth­er area - St James, West­moor­ings, any oth­er area - if this had hap­pened, this would have been fixed long time,” com­mu­ni­ty ac­tivist An­der­son Williams told Guardian Me­dia yes­ter­day. 

He said the col­lapse has al­so re­sult­ed in sew­er­age back­ing up in­to res­i­dents’ homes.

Since the res­i­dents no­ti­fied the Wa­ter and Sew­er­age Au­thor­i­ty (WASA), the coun­cil­lor and mem­ber of par­lia­ment of the prob­lem, he said all that was done was the block­ing of the road and a pump placed to flush the wa­ter out of the hole in­to a near­by drain. 

“It’s dan­ger­ous. It’s a haz­ard to the chil­dren es­pe­cial­ly, and to the whole com­mu­ni­ty,” Williams said.

He lament­ed that the on­ly way the com­mu­ni­ty gets any re­sults is when they protest, which he said is not fair to them.

“If it’s for me alone, I will protest be­cause the on­ly way to get some­thing done in Beetham and Laven­tille is by protest­ing.”

Beetham/Pic­ton coun­cil­lor Ak­il Au­dain said he has been in con­tact with WASA and they are ex­pect­ed to start mo­bil­is­ing to fix the prob­lem. How­ev­er, he not­ed this may take a few days. Au­dain said the Min­istry of Works and Trans­port is ex­pect­ed to re­pair a near­by tem­po­rary road­way for res­i­dents to use.


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