Ministry posts notices on homes

Wed, May 26th 2021, 04:48 PM

THE Ministry of Works recently posted contravention notices on 28 shanty town structures in New Providence and is in the process of demolishing them, according to a top official.

Brent Ferguson, the ministry’s building control officer, said yesterday: “This is an ongoing exercise and other notices would have been issued and will continue to be issued as the need arises.”
#His comment came after Works Minister Desmond Bannister urged Bahamians to report shanty town structures so they can be demolished.
#“Where they see these shanty houses being constructed, it’s important for them to report them to the Ministry of Works,” he told reporters yesterday before a Cabinet meeting.
#“This weekend, a constituent of mine in Carmichael sent me photographs showing shanty houses being constructed at a shanty town in my constituency. (There’s) another one in Tall Pines. And if you see these photographs, they are very close to legally built homes of Bahamians and they are going to cause challenges in those communities.
#“The building control officer has been notified. We’re going to give them the requisite notices and we are going to take them down.”
#The Ministry of Works has begun demolishing occupied structures in The Farm shanty town in Abaco and is determined to demolish all such structures that were built after the Supreme Court granted an injunction against demolishing shanty town structures in 2018.
#“There is a culture now that is developing of persons who determine they are not going to comply with what the court has ordered,” Mr Bannister said.
#“Notwithstanding what the court has said, they won’t comply. It is important in those circumstances for those of us who care about our way of life, who care about our communities where we are going to grow up our children, where our families are going to live, that we report these irregularities when we see them so that the government authorities can act promptly.

Brent Ferguson, the ministry’s building control officer, said yesterday: “This is an ongoing exercise and other notices would have been issued and will continue to be issued as the need arises.”

His comment came after Works Minister Desmond Bannister urged Bahamians to report shanty town structures so they can be demolished.

“Where they see these shanty houses being constructed, it’s important for them to report them to the Ministry of Works,” he told reporters yesterday before a Cabinet meeting.

“This weekend, a constituent of mine in Carmichael sent me photographs showing shanty houses being constructed at a shanty town in my constituency. (There’s) another one in Tall Pines. And if you see these photographs, they are very close to legally built homes of Bahamians and they are going to cause challenges in those communities.

“The building control officer has been notified. We’re going to give them the requisite notices and we are going to take them down.”

The Ministry of Works has begun demolishing occupied structures in The Farm shanty town in Abaco and is determined to demolish all such structures that were built after the Supreme Court granted an injunction against demolishing shanty town structures in 2018.

“There is a culture now that is developing of persons who determine they are not going to comply with what the court has ordered,” Mr Bannister said.

“Notwithstanding what the court has said, they won’t comply. It is important in those circumstances for those of us who care about our way of life, who care about our communities where we are going to grow up our children, where our families are going to live, that we report these irregularities when we see them so that the government authorities can act promptly.

 

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