RBSC

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Sandy was more than breeze...

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Sandy was more than breeze...

    Sandy destroys homes, livestock, crops in St. Thomas & Portland

    Sandy leaves trail of destruction in the east
    Friday, October 26, 2012






    A true picture of the damage inflicted by Hurricane Sandy started to emerge yesterday in St Thomas and Portland, where homes were destroyed, crops and livestock wiped out, and roads reduced to single-lane traffic from fallen trees and utility poles.
    In some areas, people were still wading through knee-deep water to get to their homes, a day after the late season category one storm, that caught most Jamaicans off guard, dumped heavy rain on the island for almost three hours.


    Seventy-nine-year-old Hazel McLean is a picture of despair as she stands before her house demolished by Hurricane Sandy in Greenwall, Whitehorses, St Thomas yesterday. (Photo: Garfield Robinson)


    1/2

    Many homes in both parishes are now without roofs and, in some cases, entire wooden structures have crumbled under the pressure of Sandy’s 150 km/h (90 mph) winds.
    The devastation was evident from Bull Bay in St Andrew where residents were impacted by both wind and heavy rains. While some persons set about repairing their roof and zinc fences, others in the Eight Miles community sat hopelessly outside their flooded homes.
    But even in their moment of distress, some persons set aside their own problems to participate in a united effort to clean a nearby drain to the sea, said to be the source of the problem.
    Scores of men said they started to clean the drain from the wee hours of yesterday morning as they tried desperately to clear a path for the water which left many marooned in their homes.
    A resident who identified himself only as Dave, said the community came together to clear the drain themselves as they were not expecting any help from the authorities.
    “From morning we deh here, not even breakfast we eat, and look how hard di man dem a work,” he said, pointing to some men lying on their stomachs in a water-filled culvert.
    The frustration evident on his face, Dave said this is what the residents face each time a storm hits the island.
    The residents say the relevant authorities have failed to act, despite pleas for a larger drain to take the overflow from a nearby pond.
    “Politics change ya now, because de people dem nah ask fi individual help like pound ah rice or flour; what dem want is for things like the drain fi fix,” he said.
    The reason for his frustration was further evident when the Jamaica Observer news team waded through knee-high water to his front door.
    “Mi father and mother dead leave the house give me and right now is like me no inherit nutten,” he said.
    Fellow resident Leroy ‘Lion’ Edwards, whose house was completely flooded, said the problem can be easily solved if the Government acquires additional lands to widen the drain. “That is all it need, and yet, nobody nah do nutten bout it,” Edwards said.
    Councillor Pat Morgan (PNP, Bull Bay Division) said she has been trying for more than 13 years to get the National Works Agency (NWA) to address the problem.
    “From 1998 when I was councillor here the NWA came and took estimate on top of estimate and nothing else happen,” she said, adding that she has made recent representation but that, too, has fallen on deaf ears.
    In Cane River Pen, residents waded through knee-deep water to get in and out of their homes, while the elderly and children remained trapped inside.
    The residents blamed the design of the road and the failure of the authorities to ensure the drains are properly cleaned.
    In Lloyds and Aeolus Valley outside Yallahs, St Thomas, not only were several houses flattened, but residents lost crops and livestock.
    Seventy-nine-year-old Hazel McLean had vacated her one-room house only 30 minutes before Sandy flattened the building.
    “This house pass through (Hurricane) Gilbert and nutten no happen,” said her daughter Iris McLean.
    The senior citizen said although she no longer has a home of her own, she would not cry as “Me just glad fi life”.
    The main road from St Thomas to Portland was unrecognisable in many sections where fallen trees and downed utility wires dangled dangerously across the thoroughfare.
    Residents surmised that their electricity may not be restored for some time, given the significant damage to the utility poles.
    In Manchioneal, the shacks on the beach were flat, while several homes stood roofless.
    There were, however, several good Samaritans who continuously hacked at the overhanging branches to allow motorists to squeeze through.
    “From morning me ah give voluntary service,” said Kenroy Soaris of Port Antonio, who was seen busy clearing a section of the Blue Lagoon main road.
    The Norwich Primary School lost the entire Grade 1 block, affecting over 90 students.
    “We will have to make alternate arrangements for the students to be in school,” Principal Claudia McLean told the Observer.
    Some houses and churches in Norwich and Passley Gardens suffered roof damage, while roads in Friday, Swift River, Bybrook, Claverty, and other districts remained blocked.
    At the College of Agriculture, Science and Education, buildings on the animal science tutorial farm, east campus library, Dorm C, and on the west campus, suffered structural damage.
    Last night, Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller, in an address to the nation, said that she had instructed various agencies to submit, by today, detailed reports of the damage with their priorities for recovery.
    “These will be considered at next Monday’s Cabinet meeting,” she said, pointing out that she had surveyed the damage during an aerial tour of sections of St Thomas, Portland, St Mary, and St Catherine.





    http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...mas---Portland

  • #2
    yeah it hit the east hard. Some people up inna the hills get cut off.
    • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

    Comment


    • #3
      Tell Brickie fi mi.


      BLACK LIVES MATTER

      Comment


      • #4
        Follow up story...
        Laughing in the face of tragedy

        BY COREY ROBINSON Sunday Observer reporter robinsonc@jamaicaobserver.com
        Sunday, October 28, 2012






        HER house was blown away, her farm levelled, and she came within metres of sustaining serious injuries, but 79-year-old Hazel McLean has refused to let it break her faith in God.
        Though obviously in shock, it seemed the resident of Greenwall district, located near White Horses in St Thomas, garnered renewed faith from the misfortune which befell her courtesy of Hurricane Sandy... and it made her sing and dance.


        Seventy-nine year old Hazel McLean speaks of her faith in God despite her house and farm being ravaged by Hurricane Sandy.


        1/5

        "Everything is moving, Lord, everything is moving..." the woman intoned, prancing around barefoot amidst shattered boards and soaked furniture — the remnants of her home for more than 20 years.
        "What mi must do, young boy?" she asked this reporter. "No... I never ask you to stan' up and look pon me — answer me?" she demanded, before breaking into another lively chorus.
        Before finishing the stanza, however, the woman stopped, striking a quaint pose as if for an audience, and continued: "Humble yourself, the sick and the scornful because the Lord will provide. It is God's work and whatsoever it is, we have to take it. He will provide," she said, a smile breaking her wrinkled face.
        As her emotions fluctuated, McLean's antics alternated between inspirational, and disheartening — especially when she stopped singing, threw her hands over her head and stared into space. It seemed the reality of her ordeal hit hardest at these times.
        But the ardent Christian from the nearby New Independent Baptist Church was her own bouy. She soon shrugged off that sombre demeanour and restored her smile.
        "It don't make any sense you put your hand on your head and bawl; what you going to bawl for? Tell me. It could have been worse, very worse. So, I have to give God thanks," she said, again breaking into a lively chorus with spirited dance moves to complement the notes.
        Just minutes after being helped from the one bedroom structure by her grandaughter, Adola Mitchell — who lives in another board dwelling to the rear of the premises — McLean's house collapsed under the onslaught of Hurricane Sandy's powerful winds as it lashed the island Wednesday.
        From a window in Mitchell's dank dwelling the two watched as McLean's furniture and appliances were battered by the elements, the walls of the house completely blown off its foundation.
        But it was only at dawn Thursday that the damage to McLean's nearby farm was realised. Acres of crops including banana, cassava, and sorrel were flattened and flooded by the category one storm.
        For Mitchell, the loss of the farm meant that harder times were looming. But she finds comfort in the fact that her grandmother was not harmed.
        "She (McLean) sells the crops that she reap to earn a little living, but even with everything, I am just happy that she never got hurt," she said. "Because we could have overlooked the situation and let her stay in the house and something happened to her. We couldn't deal wid that," she said.
        Until McLean's board house is rebuilt, and her farm reseeded by her sons, she will have to stay in her granddaughter's already crammed dwelling. Despite this, the family's only request from the authorities is that they provide a "little food".
        In Lloyds, St Thomas, similar stories unfolded.
        There, the demolition of another board house by Hurricane Sandy meant the separation of 14-year-old Talitha Graham from her two siblings.
        Talitha, her older sister Roxanne, 21, her brother, mother and stepfather, will have to find separate places to live until the family is able to rebuild after fleeing their two-bedroom home when it started to sway with the gale force winds of the storm.
        "I was in the house sleeping, that was about 4:00 pm," Talitha recalled. "And dem wake me up and tell me that di house a blow weh. We had to run out in the rain go over a one of my neighbour's house go stay," she continued, noting that seconds later the house completely toppled over, leaving only its tiled floor.
        When the Sunday Observer visited the area, Talitha's parents left their children at home to seek assistance to rebuild, she said.
        Next door, 68-year-old Cassira Coley was busy cleaning the last of her 150 dead chickens. The birds drowned when the coop, positioned at the rear of her property, was flooded in the storm.
        For Coley, this scenario was a recurring nightmare. Just two months before, the chicken farmer lost about 200 chickens to ravenous mongoose.
        "This morning my son came down here about after six and him seh 'mama, don't come down here cause all of your chicken dem dead," recounted the broken woman, adding that despite her son's warnings she could not help but to visit the area. There, her worst fears were realised.
        "It mash me up bad. I don't know what to do 'cause I am 68, this that I do (raising chickens) is just to pay me light bill, me water bill, and buy likkle food. So I don't know what I am going to do," she said, adding that her kitchen was also badly destroyed by the hurricane.
        As Coley spoke, another resident, Judith Wilson, bemoaned the difficulties of the days to come: "We don't have no breadfruit, no june plum, no ackee tree; everything blow down. Hungry going to kill the whole a wi," she said, palming two breadfruits from one of the downed trees.
        In Lyssons, Hansley Williams enjoyed a break with four friends after clearing away a pear tree that had toppled onto his house, destroying his veranda.
        "That gyal Sandy, when me hear how she a whistle mi start beg har fi stop. Me all start beg har fi no teck off me zinc, me pray till me drop a sleep a pray," he laughed, as he sipped liquor with the group. "When mi come out mi see that the tree fall dung pon the house and mash up the whole a me veranda. Mi just done clean it up," he said, making fun of the viciousness of the storm and its name.


        Comment


        • #5
          Very Sad.

          Another tragedy is that government help will be along party lines.....
          The only time TRUTH will hurt you...is if you ignore it long enough

          HL

          Comment


          • #6
            unless she inna Vaz constiteuency. LOl
            • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

            Comment


            • #7
              ..and you know this for a FACT?

              Comment


              • #8
                ..and all now not a word from the Member of Parliament for Eastern Portland. But then again, does Eastern Portland ever have a working MP??

                KMT
                Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
                - Langston Hughes

                Comment


                • #9
                  That 'house' does not help the storyline. It appears to be something a wind of 20MPH strength would topple. Question is how did it last the weight of her hold on the door jam without coming apart?
                  "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                  Comment

                  Working...
                  X