The Housing Development Corporation (HDC) is seeking to assure residents of Real Spring, Valsayn, that there is little to fear over the integrity of two electricity poles carrying high-tension wires on the western side of the estate.
Residents were yesterday fearful that recent flooding had eroded the land around the poles and that another flood in the area could cause them to collapse.
“This poses a real danger already as it is because one of the poles is actually leaning. Every time the water comes up over the river bank it is taking a piece of the land. This flood was the worst so far and if this kind of flooding happens again it can be worse and those poles can go with the land and waters causing grave danger,” one resident said.
However, the HDC sent a crew to take a look at the poles yesterday and was able to assure the residents that their fears were not warranted at this time.
The HDC said that the inspection they did revealed that the poles were stable and pose no danger.
However, the HDC said that out of an abundance of caution, the Trinidad and Tobago Electricity Commission will put some additional support at the base of the pole.
Residents were yesterday still cleaning up from floods that occurred earlier this week.
“We got assistance initially from an HDC maintenance crew and now we have to do the rest but it is a lot more. In my apartment, the kitchen cupboards got water soaked. The sandbags we put around did not help the situation. Water was seeping through the cracks, the steps and even the sewer lines in some of our units in the development,” one woman told us.
Another resident said he lost his entire living room set and possibly some major household appliances.
“I had to put my stove and fridge on concrete blocks. There was seven inches of water inside the house. Most of the tiles lifted and I was told to get a private contractor to get a quotation to submit to HDC but I hope that we are well compensated. All my plants around my home dying. There was four feet of water over my fence. Terrible, we cannot afford for this to happen to us again.”
Last week, HDC’s chairman Noel Garcia assured that mitigation measures will be implemented in the development similar to what was done at HDC’s Greenvale housing development, including the installation of pumps and sluice gates.
At Bamboo Number Three, streets were lined with debris including damaged furniture, clothes, toys and mattresses.
Resident Jeewan Mahadeo, 55, said he has been living in the area all his life and added that it was the first time he had ever seen so much flooding.
“We were under four, five feet of water. I’m tired cleaning up. All my things are outside but almost everything damaged and destroyed. My dogs were upstairs in a little corner for days. This is very, very bad. We never expected this at all and something needs to be done. The last flood was in 2018 and this year about 90 per cent of the village flooded out. Who never got flood, got flood this time,” Mahadeo said.
“They need to raise the banks because them banks there failing,” he added.
Councillor for Valsayn/St Joseph in the Tunapuna/Piarco Regional Corporation, Seema Ramsaran-Augustine was in the area.
“We commenced an exercise with the Disaster Preparedness Management where we distributed mattresses and cleaning supplies. So we are going street to street distributing. Some families with a lot of children got two mattresses but in all, we had about 80 to be given out and we are still accepting donations for the flood victims.”