Black River recovery stalls nine months after Hurricane Melissa
Nearly nine months after Category 5 Hurricane Melissa battered Jamaica, Black River’s shops and streets remain far from rebuilt. Debris still covers many commercial sites, and local business leaders say progress toward the government’s vision of a busy commercial centre with flood-resilient corridors for a proposed third city has been painfully slow.
Kadian Myers Brown, a veteran entrepreneur and former president of the Black River Chamber of Commerce, says the town is stuck in a lull. She and other operators are pressing the government for firm assurances about Black River’s future, financial help, and an immediate roadmap to restore the capital of St. Elizabeth.
Reflecting on family-owned firms trying to restart the commercial district, Myers Brown told the Jamaica Observer there is no visible advance on the resilience agenda officials keep promoting. “There is nothing happening in this space in terms of this new resilience that we hear the government speaking about,” she said.
In March, Delano Seiveright, state minister in the Ministry of Industry, Investment and Commerce, warned that Jamaica must reopen for business without delay. Pointing to overseas cases where recovery dragged, he said commercial life in those communities withered and never fully returned. That argument underpinned a shift from short-term rescue measures toward longer-term business development in Black River — a shift Myers Brown and others now say has lost momentum.
Jamaica Chamber of Commerce president Emile Lyaba backs the push for quicker action. He argues firms cannot wait indefinitely without interim help and supports faster funding and facilitation for Black River’s commercial community until broader reconstruction is ready.
A recent Black River business survey found employment and incomes have fallen. Lyaba said the JCC has tried to ease the pressure through grant programmes for people in damaged areas and has teamed up with the Private Sector Organisation of Jamaica and the Jamaica Manufacturers Association on joint private-sector funds meant to strengthen resilience. Those grants, he said, should reach applicants soon.
Lyaba urged the public sector to move with equal urgency so enterprises still clinging to thin lifelines can survive until larger recovery works take hold.
Syndicated from CVM TV News (Video) · originally published .
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