Tobago House of Assembly Secretary for Infrastructure, Quarries and Urban Development, Trevor James, says the cargo issues on the seabridge have not yet affected major projects on the island.
However, James, in a phone interview with Guardian Media yesterday, hinted to signs of trouble ahead, as hardware stores across the island are out cement, steel, sand and blocks.
He predicted that the projects under the THA will start experiencing the repercussions of the seabridge issues starting from next week, with the Studley Park Enterprise Limited (SPELL) being one of the first affected.
“As far as SPELL goes, what the chairman has said to me is that by next week, cement will become a challenge. But we don’t have a real challenge here on the island that we can identify on the THA side with regard to construction projects. Not much construction projects are going on on our side either, so we don’t have a real challenge yet,” he said.
“I know the hardware is out of cement but at SPELL we buy cement and they come by barge. The impact of that will hit the construction sector by next week.”
However, he described the current cargo issue as another attempt by Central Government to undermine Tobago.
“We have allowed a structure in a country to exist where one island depends solely on the other island for its provision. As a government, we took a wilful decision not to operate under this and that wilful decision has us where we are today. When the PNM came into office in 2015 and refused to extend the contract for the existing vessel, had Tobagonians using barge for a long time and then proceeded to lease a 38-year-old vessel. You cannot plan a country like that. That makes the case, again, for Tobago to develop the infrastructure for direct importation.”
Meanwhile, former Truckers and Traders Association president Horace Ameade said the current scenario was waiting to happen.
“From 2011 to 2013, both the Truckers and Tobago Chamber met with the port and gave them suggestions of the vessel that we need. After that, when this Government came into power, we met with Nedco (National Entrepreneurship Development Company) and gave them all the documents that we had about the vessel that we think they should be looking for so they can custom build one.
“Between then and now nothing has been done. So, it was a crisis waiting to happen. It happen so and we like to react, we don’t like to put things in place and do things before the issue happens. We operate in a crisis mode.”