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FM
Former Member

IT DOESN’T TAKE A SCIENTIST TO SOLVE GUYANA’S FLOODING PROBLEMS

November 23, 2014 | By | Filed Under News 
 

From the Diaspora

 

By Ralph Seeram

On my recent visit to Guyana I was “hanging” out with my friends in New Amsterdam at a “rum shop”. We had a roadside view, thanks to an extension of the premises to the road. We were sitting over a main concrete drain which was about one foot deep. I found it odd; nostalgia stepped in. You see, I grew up in the area, and I recalled the concrete drain was four to five feet deep back then. I am seeing visions of old Uncle Dabit with his long broom sweeping that very gutter in that very spot. Uncle Dabit was part of a team that was dedicated to cleaning the drains, gutter and trenches in New Amsterdam back when I was a “small boy”. In those days there was no flooding in New Amsterdam or the type of flooding Georgetown and the Coast have been experiencing this week. Social media especially were “flooded” pardon the pun with pictures of a flooded Georgetown, the water was not discriminating residences from business. All were affected. The consensus seemed to be “rain set up”, Georgetown flood. There is enough blame to go around, everybody pointing their fingers at each other but themselves. So who’s to blame? It’s the government, the municipality and the residents themselves. The government needs not to create any new infrastructure to solve this problem. The infrastructure is already there, problem is they have been neglected for decades, by the PNC and now the PPP government. The solution is so simple; clean the drains, gutters and canals; it is simple as that. We all know Guyana is below sea level, so the water does not drain in the rivers or ocean 24 hours a day. That is where the canals and drains and gutters come in. You see people think of the canals, gutters and drains as only to drain water. What is lost on people is that they serve a double purpose, it’s not only to drain water but they also serve as a reservoir, a catch basin if you will. When it rains, the water accumulates in them until the tide is low for the kokers and sluices to open for water to drain in the ocean or rivers. But what has happened over the years, the trenches, canals and drains have been neglected, silted or blocked up completely. So I fail to see why people are surprised that the city is flooded. Residents who throw their garbage in them also add to the problem. Recently when I was in Georgetown, I was in the Kitty area, where some trenches which serve as main drainage were overrun with thick grass and garbage. I passed by the Kitty Market and Police station and was sick to my stomach, literally sick. I felt like throwing up. The drains were blocked, filled with stagnant and filthy blackish water. Don’t let me tell you about the stench; it was unbearable. It’s a disease outbreak waiting to happen. The businesses in that area can do much to help tidy the area. If I was a consumer in Guyana I would not go shopping in that area. The businessmen in that area, just like most businessmen around the country, feel they have no social responsibility to keep their environment clean, healthy and attractive. They feel like it’s only the Government’s responsibility to keep the drains clear. If the government agencies make a concerted and sustained effort to clean all trenches and drains on a proactive basis, this problem can easily be solved. It is as easy as that. But what I find is that Government agencies are more reactive rather than proactive. Last year I attended a wedding. The wedding party had to leave Kitty to go LBI, East Coast Demerara. Driving along the road along the seawall I could see the homes on the right under about two feet of water. On the way back the road was blocked and traffic was diverted to the Railway Embankment. I could not help seeing several excavators clearing the canals for the water to drain faster. So what was wrong with this picture? Here is the government reacting to situation, if the authorities had cleared those canals on a steady basis there would have been no flooding. That is what I am talking about being proactive. Everything helps. If residents take pride in cleaning their environment – keep the drains in front of their yards clean, dispose of their garbage properly, the drains will not be clogged. One of the problems is when there is a serious flood it is not the government that suffers, not the government that loses. It is the residents and the business community that suffer. The older folks of Georgetown will tell you that Georgetown never flooded “when rain set up”. So why is it being flooded now? Sometimes population growth has an impact on infrastructure such as drainage. We cannot make that argument in this situation, as Guyana’s population has remained stagnant at around 750,000 people since “I was a small boy”. Here in Florida which experiences heavy rainfall, they have a simple solution. Most communities have retention ponds and some of these are like lakes. So when there is a heavy downpour these reservoirs collect all the excess water and drain later. The canals, trenches and drains are Guyana’s reservoirs. If they are silted, over run with grass and garbage, where do you expect the excess water to drain? Into yards and businesses of course. One can easily come to the conclusion that the drainage system was better a hundred years ago than it is in Guyana today. Ralph Seeram can be reached at email; ralph35@hotmail.com and Facebook.

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IT DOESN’T TAKE A SCIENTIST TO SOLVE GUYANA’S FLOODING PROBLEMS

IT WOULD APPEARS AS IF THE CORRUPT PPP/C IS PURPOSELY MAKING THIS A PROBLEM SO THAT THEY CAN THIEF BILLIONS: RE !) THE PUMPS AND 2) MONEY LIKE THE G$500, MILLIONS:
 
THE FASTER WE GET RID OF THESE BUGS AND CROOKS, THE BETTER IT WILL BE FOR GUYANA.
 
FM

Spontaneous Emission,

 

I suspect this is a piece of propaganda put out by the Ramotar administration to alleviate the attacks on his gov't for the recent floods in Guyana. I believe Kelly Village is in Guyana and those people in the video were coached to speak with a Trini accent to make it look it all was happening in Trinidad.

Billy Ram Balgobin

Just imagine, during the PNC days the gutters and canals were kept far tidier. Those were the days when Indo people complained they couldn't get a job under the PNC. Now the PPP is in charge and the problem is out of control. Hiring a bulldozer from a PPP associate to clear all the drains in Guyana might be economically profitable for the PPP, but it doesn't provide more tan a few jobs to select few. And they are going to make sure that the problem never goes away so that they can cash in on the contract for decades. 

Mr.T
On my recent visit to Guyana I was “hanging” out with my friends in New Amsterdam at a “rum shop”.

 

One can easily come to the conclusion that the drainage system was better a hundred years ago than it is in Guyana today.

 

Here in Florida which experiences heavy rainfall, they have a simple solution. Most communities have retention ponds and some of these are like lakes.

 

IT DOESN’T TAKE A SCIENTIST TO SOLVE GUYANA’S FLOODING PROBLEMS, November 23, 2014 | By | Filed Under News, From the Diaspora

 

Ralph Seeram can be reached at email; ralph35@hotmail.com and Facebook.

1. Retention ponds in Florida and other locations, particularly in North America, are relative new approaches which has gross permanent and devastating effects on the specific local areas/communities.

 

2. While the drainage system functioned effectively over one hundred years ago the needs has increased over time while Guyana still experiences the cross tidal effects of the Amazon and Orinoco rivers.

 

3. “Hanging” out at “rum shops” to address these issues surely has gross disadvantages.

FM
Originally Posted by Billy Ram Balgobin:

Spontaneous Emission,

 

I suspect this is a piece of propaganda put out by the Ramotar administration to alleviate the attacks on his gov't for the recent floods in Guyana. I believe Kelly Village is in Guyana and those people in the video were coached to speak with a Trini accent to make it look it all was happening in Trinidad.

TRINIDAD GUARDIAN, SEPT 19, 2011 --- "I rarely watch television these days. This is mainly because it is difficult for me to engage with regular mainstream television programmes. But I am not alone as there is a huge shift away from television viewing towards the Internet in particular. One thing I particularly dislike about television is ads. When I did have cable television, I ensured that we had a PVR/DVR which meant that I never watched anything live. Rather programmes were recorded so that I could fast forward past commercials. Now I confess that I am one of those that spend more and more hours each day in front of my laptop. I must also confess that one of my favourite Web sites has to be YouTube and on that site, one of my favourite channels has to be Kelly Village TV. Just do a YouTube search for “KellyVillageTV.”..

FM

Dem people have to get grass to feed their cows. How are you going to get milk for your tea? Do you want to drink black tea and avoid lil flood water or do you prefer lil flood water with plenty milk for your tea?

Billy Ram Balgobin
Originally Posted by Billy Ram Balgobin:

Dem people have to get grass to feed their cows. How are you going to get milk for your tea? Do you want to drink black tea and avoid lil flood water or do you prefer lil flood water with plenty milk for your tea?

Typical low breed goat shit.

FM
Originally Posted by Mars:

The forty foot canal that runs through the Lower East Coast into the Botanical Gardens

 

I used to catch fish in this canal with fishing rod, not far from where Brigadier Joe Singh lived. This view of the canal is shocking, as are the others Mars has posted.

FM
Originally Posted by HM_Redux:
Originally Posted by Billy Ram Balgobin:

Dem people have to get grass to feed their cows. How are you going to get milk for your tea? Do you want to drink black tea and avoid lil flood water or do you prefer lil flood water with plenty milk for your tea?

Typical low breed goat shit.

How do you incorporate your Water-down Gobar brain on the internet?

FM
Last edited by Former Member

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