San Fernando Mayor Robert Parris says significant improvements to public order can be achieved without language he believes diminishes the country, as debate continues over how local authorities should address indiscipline and enforcement.
In a statement issued yesterday, Parris welcomed what he described as a more analytical approach taken by Chaguanas Mayor Faaiq Mohammed in addressing shared challenges such as illegal vending, overgrown private lots and public nuisances—issues he said San Fernando confronts daily. However, Parris stressed that modern leadership requires more than identifying problems, calling instead for structured analysis, practical responses and guided implementation.
Where he differed, Parris said, was with remarks endorsing the description of Trinidad and Tobago as a “lawless dump,” language recently used by Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar and supported by Mohammed.
“While I fully accept that there are serious issues affecting discipline, enforcement and public behaviour, I do not agree that the use of language which diminishes our country or places blame in a politically charged manner serves the national interest,” Parris said.
He warned that rhetoric driven by emotion rather than responsibility risks further societal decline, arguing that strict enforcement must be paired with transparent, measured leadership that promotes patriotism, accountability and shared responsibility.
Mohammed, in a separate statement, aligned himself with the Prime Minister’s position, saying law and order are about protecting the majority from the misconduct of a few.
He cited persistent challenges faced by municipalities, including illegal dumping, unregulated vending, traffic violations, noise complaints and abandoned properties.
He said Chaguanas would undergo what he described as a cultural shift in 2026, combining enforcement with structure and opportunity. Mohammed outlined plans for designated vending and transport spaces, stronger laws to address errant landowners, and increased deployment of litter and traffic wardens.
“Enforcing the law is not cruelty. It is fairness,” Mohammed said, adding that support, guidance and timelines would be provided to help people transition into compliance, with consequences for those who refuse to obey the law.
Parris said San Fernando would continue to pursue an approach rooted in structure, fairness and opportunity, with firm but guided enforcement as the city enters the new year.
