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Relief to be given flood-affected farmers – Gov’t officials will today visit most affected areas

MINISTER of State, Mr Joseph Harmon has said that farmers affected by the flooding caused by heavy downpour late Wednesday night and yesterday morning will receive relief from the government.Minister Harmon gave the assurance yesterday evening following the conclusion of a Cabinet meeting held at the Civil Defence Commission (CDC), next to Camp Ayangana, Georgetown.


“Farmers are really the bread basket of the nation, and we have to pay careful attention to our farmers,” the Minister of State said, pointing out that from an air reconnaissance conducted yesterday, the Administration has a fair sense of the extent of the floods and where it needs to go.


Today, he said, Government technical officers will be deployed to critically affected areas to meet with farmers, listen to their concerns, and see what sort of help can be dispensed.


From reports, the most affected areas are Canals Number One and Two on the West Bank Demerara; and in the areas of Boerasirie, Uitvlugt, Leonora and Naamryck in Region 3 (Essequibo Islands-West Demerara).


In Region 4 (Demerara-Mahaica), the Capital City of Georgetown has been flooded, and areas between Ogle and Buxton on the East Coast Demerara have been mostly affected.


“We will also be paying attention to the level of water in the conservancy, and the integrity of the dams. We are working in areas that have been identified, but that is not to say that there are other areas that would not receive our attention,” Minister Harmon told the Guyana Chronicle.

 

MOST AFFECTED
But for now, he said, focus will be placed on addressing the needs of farmers most affected and in need of urgent attention.


The Minister of State also pointed out that the government will have to make a proper assessment of what is needed before determining what form of assistance will be given to farmers.


“We are a resilient people, and they (farmers) do not all just look for hand-outs. And so, what we will do is that we will work with these farmers to see how best we can deal with their situation. We would not want to say now this is what we will do and wouldn’t do, but we will have to work with them to see how best we can alleviate that problem which they have,” Harmon said.


Prime Minister, Mr Moses Nagamootoo, who also spoke with the Guyana Chronicle, said the heavy flooding experienced could have been less, had the former People’s Progressive Party (PPP) Administration effected repairs to kokers and proper service to pumps.


The flooding, he contended, is as a result of poor management by the PPP, and an accumulation of their neglect over the years.

 

RELIEF
But, the Prime Minister said, the government is closely monitoring the situation, and relief will be given to those mostly affected.


“There is hope that we can take care of the basic needs of people. Where we have people who need shelter, we will look after that. Where there is need for emergency food supplies, we will look after that. We will make sure people have water, and, above all, we will make sure that farmers have some relief in terms of their flooded out farms. We will try to address all these things,” he told the Guyana Chronicle.


Minister of Agriculture, Mr Noel Holder said Regions 2 (Pomeroon-Supenaam) and 3 have been mostly affected by the flooding, with some areas in Region 5 (Mahaica-Berbice) also being affected.


He also pointed out that from information received thus far, the losses suffered by farmers are not humongous.


Guyana in the past 24 hours has experienced heavy rainfall, reaching record-breaking levels. From all reports, some eight inches of rainfall has been recorded. This is way above the level the country’s drainage system can handle.


Our centuries-old drainage system, built by the Dutch, has the capacity to drain 2.5 inches of rainfall in a period of 24 hours.

 

By Tajeram Mohabir

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Gov’t musters emergency relief for ‘second baptism in water’ –package to include food, water, other necessities

 

AN historic first meeting of the Cabinet, held yesterday at the Civil Defence Commission (CDC), Thomas Lands,will see the government rolling out a comprehensive national relief effort in the wake of the abrupt flooding across Guyana’s low-lying coastal areas over the past three days.“There are some areas that have been identified, that require help insofar as evacuating persons from the flooded areas, and to put them into safe shelters,” Minister of State Joseph Harmon told the Guyana Chronicle last evening immediately after the Cabinet meeting.


The minister said residents of affected areas will be provided with food supplies, water supplies, and other necessities as well as mattresses and camp cots among other relief items.


“The flooding, of course, is not just in Georgetown,”Minister Harmon said, explaining, “We had some air reconnaissance from Regions 2 (Pomeroon- Supenaam), 3 (Essequibo Islands- West Demerara), 4 (Demerara-Mahaica), and 5 (Mahaica-Berbice)… [And] we were able to identify the specific areas that require help.


“Civil society is involved, the Red Cross is involved, all of the Government agencies are involved, so we have a full-scale operation here at the [Civil] Defence Commission, and the fact that we have been able to activate a National Emergency Operations Centre [NEOC] is something that never happened before. We have come up with a certain plan, which will unfold as the days go by,” Minister Harmon continued.


Public Infrastructure Minister David Patterson, the central minister in this matter, is convincedof the direct relation between flooding in Georgetown and a lack of adherence to building codes.


Minister Patterson called for the stringent enforcement of laws against citizens who impede the work of technical teams in desilting drains, since “it is affecting the whole city.” This could be a collaborative effort between his ministry and the Ministry of Communities, even as the coastline grapples with what he noted was the highest level of rainfall in 130 years.


Such impediments, according to Patterson, are linked to the inaccessibility of drains by technical crews, which continues to challenge the hopes of a faster and more effective relief of the floodwaters.


“We have persons encroaching on our canals,” Minister Patterson said when asked about the major challenges to drainage in low-lying areas. “We have to find a solution to that because we can’t clear certain canals. The will is there of this Government to find a solution, and we will get there.


“The medium-term solution [is that] we have to review our building regulations [and] our designs,” Patterson noted. “There are persons who have been encroaching on our drainage system for whatever reason,” he continued, questioning whether this happens because of “lack of enforcement” or “lack of will.”


While a number of sluices in and around Georgetown are in less than favourable condition, Minister Patterson noted that there are still unspent monies from the recent tranche of $70M approved by Cabinet just after the coalition Government came into office.


He noted that the monies have not been spent because of some works, which have to be tendered for, and according to him, those tenders “have just been opened.”


Offering words of consolation to those affected by the floods was acting President Moses Nagamootoo, who chaired the Cabinet meeting while President David Granger attends the MERCOSUR meeting in Brazil.


“We are very concerned about this situation,” the acting President told this publication, “the excess rainfall has posed a challenge. This is our second baptism in water, in a matter of weeks. So we are very concerned that Guyanese are suffering.”


Mr Nagamootoo shared a similar sentiment to Ministers Harmon and Patterson that while the National Assembly had approved funds for the purchase of pumps under the previous administration, the unavailability of those pumps, which have been mired in controversy, is to the detriment of the Guyanese people.


“I believe this is an unnecessary tragedy that has befallen our people, but we are doing all we can, and [we are] mobilising all the resources to bring relief,” Mr Nagamootoo continued. “If we had some of the pumps that had been ordered from Surendra, and they had been deployed by now, I’m sure this situation would not have affected so many people.”


The opposition People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) has come out to challenge the new Government for not being equipped to deal with the issue of flooding, which has featured prominently over the years during this time.

 

The PPP/C ceded the reins of power to the A Partnership for National Unity + Alliance For Change (APNU+AFC) coalition after the May 11 polls.


The acting President brushed aside the comments, while pointing to what he called “the disease that has been accumulating on the backs of the Guyanese people from maladministration by an incompetent PPP/C administration.”


The CDC’s headquarters at Thomas Lands will house the National Emergency Operations Centre (NEOC), an inter-agency coordinating effort among Government, the CDC, and other partners. The CDC yesterday briefed Cabinet, and a report compiled from documentation in affected administrative regions was submitted to the Council of Ministers for consideration.


While Minister Harmon, as Cabinet Secretary, could not quantify how much the entire operation will cost, he disclosed the sum for the daily operations at the CDC at some $300,000, which would not include work done outside of the CDC’s headquarters.


He noted, however, “The Minister of Finance [Winston Jordan] has given assurance that whatever is needed to bring relief to the people of this country from these floodwaters, we are going to do it.”

 

By Derwayne Wills

FM
Originally Posted by Ramakant-P:

So what is it they will do for the farmers?

Give financial relief like Burnham used to in FCH so they can survive and be ready for the next planting.  Simple.

FM
Originally Posted by baseman:
Originally Posted by Ramakant-P:

So what is it they will do for the farmers?

Give financial relief like Burnham used to in FCH so they can survive and be ready for the next planting.  Simple.

uh huh . . . dem "apartheid" days wuz really something

 

nah suh bai?

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by redux:
Originally Posted by baseman:
Originally Posted by Ramakant-P:

So what is it they will do for the farmers?

Give financial relief like Burnham used to in FCH so they can survive and be ready for the next planting.  Simple.

uh huh . . . dem "apartheid" days wuz really something

 

nah suh bai?

Two different things bai!!

FM
Originally Posted by baseman:
Originally Posted by redux:
Originally Posted by baseman:
Originally Posted by Ramakant-P:

So what is it they will do for the farmers?

Give financial relief like Burnham used to in FCH so they can survive and be ready for the next planting.  Simple.

uh huh . . . dem "apartheid" days wuz really something

 

nah suh bai?

Two different things bai!!

uh huh . . . suuure

 

smfh

FM

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