Where are the worst potholes?

By RICARDO WELLS

RESIDENTS of the Montagu constituency are alarmed by the lack of a response by Ministry of Works to hazardous potholes in the area.

Motorists that use Village Road and East Bay Street as a part of their daily commute complained about several dangerous holes that need immediate attention and if not repaired quickly can cause a number of traffic issues.

When contacted for comment, Montagu MP Richard Lightbourn told The Tribune that he has been made aware of the poor road conditions and has on a number of occasions contacted Ministry of Works officials concerning the issue.

“I have made a number of representations on behalf of the residents in that area concerning the potholes, in particular two on Village Road, that are really dangerous to persons driving in that area,” Mr Lightbourn said.

“Usually there is a fast response to resolve these types of issues. I was in contact with the permanent secretary in the Ministry of Works (over) the last couple of weeks trying to correct the matter,” Mr Lightbourn added.

Former Minister of Works Neko Grant suggested that poor road conditions like the ones in the Montagu area are a result of “a lack of due diligence”.

He said that persons being contracted to carry out road repairs are not being properly vetted to ensure that they are capable of getting the job done correctly.

Mr Grant said that during his time as minister he made certain that persons contracted to complete a job were able to get the work done. “Those persons who were given contracts to carry out had to meet a certain criteria, it had to determined if they were capable of not only completing a job; but how effective the end result would be.”

The former minister did admit that he had not been made aware of the potholes in the Village Road area and could only speak in a general sense.

“Only persons who were qualified were allowed to bid for contracts, there was a process in place that assured that after a job was completed and prior to payment, the work had to be inspected and approved by certified engineers,” he added. “They had to give the word that the job was done up to par and done correctly.”

Mr Grant continued: “That process has now been tossed out of the window and the persons that are now being allowed to carry out these types of work are doing a questionable job. If it takes a couple of days of rain to reopen recently patched potholes, that means that the potholes were not properly repaired to begin with.”

Mr Lightbourn said he will continue to press the issue “until the conditions are corrected.”

Attempts to get a response from the Ministry of Works were unsuccessful.

Comments

John says...

The one by the back entrance to marathon mall and those 3 or 4 after you pass the bridge on east bay street

Posted 27 November 2014, 9:31 p.m. Suggest removal

sansoucireader says...

Looks like they're repairing the area opposite Harbour Bay on East Bay where a metal covering collapsed. Noticed those pink cones, a metal guard rail tonight and what looks like some concrete repairs.

Posted 27 November 2014, 11:04 p.m. Suggest removal

Emac says...

CowPen Road of course! As soon as the PLP got in power someone was given a contract to repair this road. Unfortunately they only repaired a part of the road while the other half heading west was left undone with potholes the size of wells all over the place. Something tells me that the contractor that was paid to do this job had to have given someone in government kickbacks. The thing is, if you give someone a contract to repair a road or a building and demand kickbacks this person, you put yourself in a position where you cannot enforce the agreement of the contract. The person or company that is responsible for repairing Cowpen road has done a terrible job and the road is incomplete. The sad part is that whoever is responsible for issuing this contract is not demanding any better from the contractor.

Posted 28 November 2014, 12:54 a.m. Suggest removal

Andrewharris says...

Ya'll ain see pot holes yet. Drive through my street; Palm Breeze off Carmichael. I challenge anyone in Nassau to find more or bigger pot holes. We have had them so long we own them. I believe the two biggest now have fish swimming in them.

Posted 28 November 2014, 6:19 a.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

Any legal size grouper or crawfish?

Posted 28 November 2014, 7:49 a.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

The really sad part is that some of these hackers are given free reign on the million dollar roads we just completed. Talk about pearls before swine. But Brave don't care, the roads he drives on are paved with butter. In two seconds he'll tell us about another report he's waiting on before he can start any work.

Posted 28 November 2014, 7:51 a.m. Suggest removal

asiseeit says...

So the man is saying the reason the roads are not being fixed or are fixed in a shoddy manner is the fact that the job is given to a PARTY SUPPORTER instead of a company that knows what it is doing. That is called CRONYISUM AND IT IS KILLING THIS COUNTRY! This is a form of CORRUPTION. Tribal politics at their best, the whole nation suffers.

Posted 28 November 2014, 9:46 a.m. Suggest removal

themessenger says...

Now that Brent is no longer in politics or in government, does that mean that Bahamas Hotmix is one again a viable alternative?

Posted 28 November 2014, 11:49 a.m. Suggest removal

Alex_Charles says...

You think the roads are bad? look at the country.... WE ARE A GIANT POT HOLE. one that will never be fixed either

Posted 28 November 2014, 4:52 p.m. Suggest removal

duppyVAT says...

With a couple of black holes ........... Bahamasair, BEC, BAMSI, ZNS, BOB

Posted 1 December 2014, 10:53 a.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

You mean "*Everybody Wins At BOB*" don't you, remember all assets and integrity were sold about a week ago. Wendy Craig didn't object. I wonder how long it will take the US to break out the baygon....

Posted 1 December 2014, 11:48 a.m. Suggest removal

Log in to comment