ST JAMES, Jamaica — Jamaican authorities have launched an intensified second phase of cleanup operations in Black River, St Elizabeth, deploying significant new resources to address debris accumulation from Hurricane Melissa. The National Solid Waste Management Authority (NSWMA) is leading the effort with a fleet of ten new trucks provided by the Jamaican government to accelerate recovery work.
NSWMA Executive Director Audley Gordon detailed the strategic approach, explaining that initial post-hurricane efforts focused exclusively on critical facilities including local hospitals and health centers. While phase one successfully removed over 200 truckloads of debris, operational capacity limitations previously prevented broader town-wide cleanup operations.
“With improved capacity, we are now committed to pushing ahead with a full clean-up of Black River,” Gordon stated, emphasizing that crews will remain deployed as long as necessary to complete the task. He declined to provide specific timelines but assured residents that work would continue methodically until the area is fully restored.
The cleanup represents a substantial operational challenge according to Sheldon Smith, Regional Operations Manager for SPM Waste Management Limited, who acknowledged the magnitude of the task while reaffirming his team’s determination. “We are here today working hard… we are not relenting and we are up to the task,” Smith assured.
Both officials appealed for community patience, emphasizing that steady progress will yield long-term benefits for the historic town. Smith optimistically noted that “as we reach the top, there is a plateau and things will get better. We will have a better Black River.”
Floyd Green, Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Mining and local Member of Parliament, emphasized the critical importance of debris removal for the town’s recovery. “For the town to get back to some semblance of normalcy, debris has to be removed,” Green stated, characterizing the effort as part of a broader national cleanup initiative across hurricane-affected parishes that will extend into the new year with focus expanding from central towns to surrounding communities.
