The Saint Lucia Solid Waste Management Authority (SLSWMA) is working swiftly to remove derelict vehicles along the roadside before Christmas.
SLSWMA Communications Manager, Emlyn Jean, explains that the aim is to beautify the Castries basin and allow for an easier flow of traffic. She says some 300 vehicles in the Castries area alone have been marked for removal.
“As long as the vehicle gets to the landfill, the owners can communicate with the authority, but it is again left to the authority to decide whether owners are entertained or not with respect to the retrieval of these vehicles…some 312 vehicles have been recorded and tagged for removal by owners,” she explained.
Jean adds that vehicle owners were given a 7-day notice to remove their vehicles along the roadsides, noting that vehicle owners would be liable for associated costs incurred by removing the vehicles.”
Before any removal is undertaken, a notice is actually served to owners, allowing them seven days to comply. If the owner fails to remove the vehicles, then the St. Lucia Solid Waste Management Authority will proceed with removal. And of course, the owner will be held liable for associated costs, especially in cases where people would like to get these vehicles back,” she said.
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Can you please provide a telephone number to alert Solid Waste about abandonned vehicles? Thank you.
There is an old truck parked on Trinity Church Road. Its tires are flat and chien lawi using it as their spa and bedroom. It’s time to get it out from there.
We need an agency to remove the derelict politicians from running for office.
The problem on this island is most of us saint Lucians have no pride we eat where we s*** and we s*** where we eat and there is no consequences for the ones breaking the rules.
Some members of the public have grown comfortable doing anything. Sometimes it is bad manners, breaking the law, other times breaking civic unwritten rules. They are given a pass for their nasty behaviors under the guise of “malaway.” A kind of expected behavior. I personally take offense for that pass in crude or criminal behavior. I was born and grew up in Castries poorest housing area. The people I grew up with were poor, however, they have class.
I was watching the evening news recently. A couple characters were griping that seven days were not enough to get their menacing properties off the streets. Those clowns have little regard for the motoring public. Their expectations were to keep inconveniencing the public until their needs were met. In the places that I know, one is normally tagged with a 24-48 hour bright orange or pink sticker. After that, the vehicle becomes fair game. Sometimes cars are booted or towed instantly for expired registration after a certain period. About time we enforce the laws of the land, otherwise, we are inadvertently setting the breeding ground for the next generation of criminals.
Not just Castries and vehicles, it should be everywhere and anything placed on the roads which should not be there. For example, just after the Dennery Fire Station, there is a 20 foot container on the side of the road, yes seriously! And right next to it, there is some wooden construction part of which is on the road, seriously! Shouldn’t these be removed from a public road, too?
La Clery is an area where vehicles are a serious hindrance to drivers and pedestrians. It is difficult to see oncoming traffic out of corners during the day and even worse at night!