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Portmore Toll case... a waste of time & money...

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  • Portmore Toll case... a waste of time & money...

    Privy Council rules against Portmore residents in toll case
    Paul Henry, Observer staff reporter henryp@jamaicaobserver.com
    Wednesday, December 05, 2007


    The group of Portmore residents who took the Government to court claiming that being required to pay for use of the Kingston to Portmore leg of Highway 2002 was a breach of their constitutional rights, suffered another blow Monday when the United Kingdom Privy Council ruled against them.
    The law lords noted in their written judgement that the appellants had not proven that they had an interest in or right over the property that the Government had acquired to construct the toll road and as such no breach had been committed.
    The law lords said also that they could not see how the imposition of a toll would prevent the residents from having free and unrestricted access to their homes or properties.
    The residents - Dr Andrew Wheatley (Jamaica Labour Party mayor of Spanish Town); then Councillor Natalie Campbell-Rodrigues (JLP, Westchester Division); Councillor Keith Blake (JLP, Independence City Division); Valrene Bennett; and Anton Young - had taken the Government to court after the previous administration in July 2006 went ahead and gave permission for the conversion of the old causeway linking the capital city of Kingston to the municipality of Portmore into a six-lane toll expressway as one of the legs of Highway 2000.
    Following their unsuccessful bid in both the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal the matter was taken to the Privy Council in October. The residents were hoping that the court would rule in their favour in order to pressure the Government to renegotiate with the operators of the highway, the French contractors Bouygues Travaux Publics, with the view to a reduction in the toll charged.
    Currently motorists pay $60 for motorcars, $100 for SUVs and $200 for buses and trucks to use the toll road.
    Reacting to the Privy Council's ruling, a disappointed Mayor Wheatley told the Observer Monday that the battle was not over and he would be meeting with his co-appellants before the end of the week to determine a way forward.
    "As citizens of Portmore we still feel that our rights have been violated," Wheatley said. "I will now have to meet with the others and discuss among ourselves the best way forward. By Thursday-Friday we should have a clear direction of where we want to go."
    Prime Minister Bruce Golding had promised, before his party formed the Government, that should the citizens lose the court battle the Jamaica Labour Party would pursue other options in reducing their burden.
    One option he said the JLP was committed to pursuing was to have the contract renegotiated. Among the issues he said the party would seek to renegotiate were:
    . to have the toll rates reviewed once, instead of twice, per year;
    . to amend the clause restricting expansion of the Mandela Highway alternative route, so as to expand it by two additional lanes; and
    . to reopen the railway with a line into Portmore, which is not possible under the current contract.
    'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

  • #2
    i am 100% in support of this...

    . to amend the clause restricting expansion of the Mandela Highway alternative route, so as to expand it by two additional lanes;

    this makes no sense, to limit or restrict the development of the country's infrastructure in the furtherance of the ojective of this private entity at the continued expense of the people...
    'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

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    • #3
      Done talk what me feel bout di whole ting. I'm sure Lazie can remind you of my position.


      BLACK LIVES MATTER

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      • #4
        The Rebecca riots took place in the rural parts of west Wales, including Pembrokeshire, Cardiganshire, and Carmarthenshire, in 1839-43. They were a series of protests made by tenant farmers against the payment of tolls (fees) charged to use the roads. Turnpike Trusts or groups of businessmen owned most of the main roads. These men fixed the charges and decided how many tollgates (turnpikes) could be built.

        During the riots, men disguised as women attacked the tollgates. They called themselves “Rebecca and her daughters”. This is most likely to be after a passage in the Bible where Rebecca talks of the need to “possess the gates of those who hate them” (Genesis XXIV, verse 60). People at that time knew the Bible well.

        Tolls were a big expense for small farmers, who used the roads to take their crops and animals to market, and also to collect lime (a chalky mineral). Lime was used to improve the quality of the soil so farmers could grow better crops. It could cost as much as five shillings (25p) in tolls to move a cart of lime eight miles inland. The people of west Wales did not want to pay to use their roads.

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        • #5
          So who yuh tink a go dress up as woman and defend di right to a free Causeway?!? Not gwine happen!


          BLACK LIVES MATTER

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          • #6
            People tink Merica just happen suh.. and hundreds of thousands march juss suh.

            We were GIVEN independence..

            mek wi di haffi fight and dead fi it.. diffrant story... dem shoot president in Merica.. wi mek Gods..

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