Elgin Taylor, Star Writer
Something is terribly wrong with the way we manage our public facilities. Take the markets, for example. Why is it so difficult to run them properly?
In recent times we have had problems getting persons to adhere to the designated vending areas, be it downtown, Kingston or the tourist resort areas of the north coast, or the Linstead or Old Harbour markets.
Certainly, the parish councils, or whichever organisation these markets and vending areas fall under, can and should be required to do a better job. Where is the management?
Lack of civic pride
Granted, the problems may not be as easy as they seem, what with the lack of civic pride in many of us, and extortion and other forms of racketeering which are features at these places.
But something urgently needs to be done to reverse this trend.
'Carry mi ackee go a Linstead Market, not a quattie wut sell' is a line from a popular Jamaican folk song, Linstead Market.
The song is still played in hotels by mento bands on the north coast, so it is not inconceivable for the market to become a tourist attraction. The construction of a few well-managed craft shops at the facility would be a step in the right direction.
But what do we have at the present time? We have a market where about 45 per cent of the vendors sell on the streets competing for the right of passage with vehicular traffic. Sections of Fletcher's Avenue and King Street are the areas generally affected.
Woefully ineffective
In addition, the current system of garbage collection is woefully ineffective, and it is customary to see a herd of goats pulling the garbage in all directions on Fletcher's Avenue, next to the fish vendors.
The police and workers from Central Park and Markets try their best to get these vendors off the streets, but they return as soon as the officers' backs are turned.
Unsanitary conditions
On several occasions public health inspectors have warned of the unsanitary conditions prevailing at these markets and have even ordered closure for some. But after a token cleaning-up exercise, everything is up and running and pretty soon it's back to square one.
The buck must stop somewhere, and people need to stand up to their responsibilities. Otherwise, as a people we will continue to falter. We will continue to tinker at nation building.