Senior Reporter
shane.superville@guardian.co.tt
For two months, residents of Leon Street, Laventille, claim they have had to deal with a growing mound of garbage in their neighbourhood, as sanitation workers have stopped collecting the refuse.
The residents are, therefore, appealing to the relevant agencies to act urgently, as they fear a further pile-up of garbage could pose a serious health problem and even prevent access to the Housing Development Corporation (HDC) apartment building.
When Guardian Media visited the neighbourhood yesterday, the blue dumpster near the entrance to the apartment complex was overflowing with garbage bags, broken furniture and other refuse, which also accumulated in smaller heaps at the side of the road, near a home.
Resident Andrew Watkins said he vaguely recalled seeing the last garbage collection done sometime in November, noting that none of the residents knew why sanitation workers had stopped picking up rubbish in the neighbourhood.
“Nobody ain’t contact us, nobody ain’t tell us nothing. We just seeing garbage piling up and nobody is picking it up,” he said.
“We need them to come and deal with this as soon as possible. This is the entrance to the (HDC) buildings here and everybody has to take this scent, people can’t even have their own windows open because they scent has them upset.”
Watkins also warned that while residents have done their best to clear garbage bags from spilling onto the roadway and blocking traffic, there was only so much that could be done.
Another resident, Marcus Bailey, lamented that in the absence of any collection system, residents continue to dump their refuse in the area, adding to the clutter. He said while residents of nearby Dorata Street were able to clear their garbage dumpster, the situation on Leon Street was too dire to address without help from trucks to carry the garbage away.
“It’s worse than ever before, we’ve called the private contractors with the (San Juan) Laventille Regional Corporation but we never got onto them.
“We already starting to see problems with rats coming around here. How much can we really remove on our own? We need a tractor or a big truck to come and take it out,” Bailey said.
Within the same apartment building, resident Michelle Primus raised concerns over falling debris from an abandoned, dilapidated building.
Pointing to exposed beams on the roof, which appeared to be supported by drainpipes along the outer wall of the building, Primus said she was concerned that the HDC and other agencies would intervene only after someone was seriously injured.
“Little children does be running up and down all on the basketball court, so it’s a clear danger. If something happens, you’ll see everybody running to help or running to do this and that.
“It’s only when somebody is hurt you will see people, other than that, you on your own.”
Primus said the building was cleared of residents 12 years ago and has been abandoned since then. She said while engineers and contractors were seen near the building late last year, there has been no update on whether the structure will be repaired or demolished.
Contacted yesterday on the issue, HDC chairman Feroze Khan suggested that questions be sent via WhatsApp. Questions and photos of the structure were sent via WhatsApp but no response was received up to news time.
Guardian Media also contacted Minister of Local Government and Rural Development Khadijah Ameen, who confirmed that issues with the collection of garbage was “an HDC matter.”
Also contacted for comment, San Juan Laventille Regional Corporation (SJLRC) chairman Richard Walcott also confirmed that the collection of garbage on the compound was the responsibility of the HDC.
