Parts of the Manzanilla/Mayaro Road have caved further into the sea as floodwaters continued to rise in the area yesterday, covering miles of the roadway and leaving many citizens stranded.
Over the last two days, the villagers have been battling nature as the Ortoire River and Nariva Swamp crossed their thresholds and flooded the roadway, causing devastation and uprooting trees, while five sections of the road caved in towards the Atlantic Ocean.
In 2014, the villagers living along the Manzanilla/Mayaro coast faced a similar disaster. However, the claimed the current scenario has been the worst.
The villagers’ only defence is placing sandbags to prevent the water from crossing into their homes but that has not been helpful.
Villager Winston Pancho, who has been packing sandbags for two days to slow the rising water, told Guardian Media, “The water level dropped but as the rains continue, the water is rising and currently we are currently packing three heights of sandbags to prevent losses in our homes.”
He added, “This is the worst we have seen the waters here and we will continue to protect our properties. Already, we have lost furniture thus far and we are preparing for the worst but having hopes that the water will go down.”
Despite the road being closed, many defied the Ministry of Works order to see where the road caved in. But for those taking the chance, a few were unlucky, as their vehicles got stuck on the now treacherous roadway.
Sangre Grande and Mayaro Rio Claro Regional Corporation officials were out on the field rendering assistance to those who were stranded.
Mayaro MP Rushton Paray and Cumuto/Manzanilla MP Dr Rai Ragbir were also on the ground.
Ragbir said approximately 200 residents were affected and he urged the public and those living in the area to seek alternative routes.
“So, as we stand here and we have been traversing the waters since yesterday and today (Thursday), I know chairman can tell you that it has actually worsened. If you were to compare this to 2014, it means that 2014 would have been an isolated event. This now has traversed the entire stretch, more or less, along Manzanilla, so many of the beach houses here have been inundated with floodwaters and as you can see, the velocity of the water, the energy of the water, what has happened, it is taking the sand away and it has taken the foundation where we stand right now, it’s a road has collapsed, more or less the entire road.”
Paray said the closure of the road was affecting hundreds, noting it is both a primary and alternate route for all seeking to access the community.
“I am urging the Minister and in ministry, as soon as the water dissipates and the engineering work can happen, to take evasive, critical urgent action to bring this road back up to some feasible means where we can get this traffic to and fro because we can have a complete shutdown of commerce in the Mayaro constituency,” Paray said.
“I’m asking only the Honourable Minister of Works and I’m asking the Honourable Prime Minister to treat this as if this is the road by Peake’s Diego Martin or Wrightson Road to give us some priority. Please do not leave us isolated as country people here and think that we have this mass of land that is about four times the size of Tobago, the region in which we encompass, the people that work here, that lives and traverse here, and so I’m looking forward to a speedy solution.”
SGRC chairman Anil Juteram said although the road was closed, many people were still using it because there were no barriers in place.
He said the ministry seemed to be asleep on the job since at the time he was being interviewed, they had not seen ministry engineers coming in to assess the damage.
However, officials from the Ministry of Works and Transport and PURE division were at the sites yesterday doing necessary assessments.