Nature and beach lovers are turning up their noses at Macqueripe Bay, once the pride and joy of pleasure-seekers from north Trinidad. Tourists who came for the Christmas holidays left disappointed without even getting to take a dip in the water. Macqueripe was considered the cleanest, unpolluted bay in and around Port-of-Spain, but within the last month this reputation has not been fitting. Construction work being done to uplift the face of the bay has caused red sand and silt to seep into its waters. The pool of red water stretches as far as 150 yards outward, preventing swimmers from even venturing in.
The entire area around the bay is so full of mud and slush that the sand is invisible. The staircase leading to the beach has become dangerous to walk on when wet and the railway preventing visitors from falling, almost has been destroyed. Members of the Macqueripe Early Morning Swimmers Association (Memsa) are the most affected by the pollution as they frequent the bay early every Sunday morning. According to Eugene Reynald, a member of Memsa, the construction work entails the building of a retaining wall, a roadway from the carpark to the bay itself and a ramp that would allow the elderly to have easy access to the beach. He said although the development is welcomed, it is doing more harm than good.
He explained that when projects of an environmental nature have to be carried out the construction company must first be issued with a certificate of environment clearance (CEC) from the Environmental Management Authority. The CEC, he said, would lay down the stipulations in an effort to protect the environment. "Among the protection measures is the laying down of a settlement pond, which will collect the debris, sand and rock so it will not find its way into the sea," Reynald said.
No settlement pond has been laid at Macqueripe Bay, he noted.
"If they had put one down, the red sand would not have made its way into the sea," he noted. He said Memsa made several complaints to the EMA about the pollution, but they received no feedback and nothing has been done. Reynald said he met with Chairman of Chaguaramas Development Authority (CDA), Noel Garcia, before the construction work began and he was assured that contractors were given a CEC and that no harm was supposed to be done to the bay. Himself a project manager who has overseen several construction projects , Reynald said work should not have started at the bay during the November to February period because seas are the roughest at that time.
"Seas are calm around Easter time and that is the best time to do work. The CDA allowed work to start at a bad time," he noted. "The EMA should have advised that work should not have been done at this time of the year," he added. On Wednesday, the road to the bay remained closed, preventing anyone with vehicles from entering.
Well-loved Macqueripe
"My wife was talking to a micro-biologist and he was saying the Carenage beach is so polluted and dangerous that girls who bathe there could lose their ability to have children," stated a frequent visitor to the beach. He showed up to take a swim, but was sorely disappointed by its condition. "I am heading back home, the only reasons I come here is because it is usually clean and I don't have to go far, and I also don't have to go over any precipice to get a swim," he joked.
"This is the only place people can swim and not get infections," Reynald added. Just as he spoke a group of nature lovers from Bermuda, garbed in their bathing attire, approached. Like Reynald, they had taken another route to get to the bay, as the access road was closed.
They had heard about Macqueripe and decided to visit. They were redirected to another beach as it was impossible to swim at the bay.