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TRAFFIC LIGHTS FOR OLD HARBOUR

Minister Mike Henry (centre) cuts the ribbon to signify the opening of the Gutters to Freetown main road; others in pic are Mr. Clement Watson head of the Road Maintenance Fund (right) and Mr. Everald Warmington, MP for South West St. Catherine.
New traffic lights were commissioned into service in
Old Harbour on
Thursday, January 7, 2010 by Minister Mike Henry and CEO of the National Works
Agency, Mr. Patrick Wong.

A view of the newly installed traffic lights.
At a ceremony marking the opening of the Gutters to
Freetown
main road, traffic lights were turned on in the Old Harbour Square for the first time. Speaking at the ceremony,
Transport and Works Minister Mike Henry expressed his appreciation to all the
various stakeholders who worked on both projects to make them a reality. He
noted that for a long time the town of Old Harbour was over-run with traffic congestion and that the roads
were not being properly maintained. It is against that background that he said
that the Ministry and the National Works Agency (NWA) came on board to address
the situation. Continuing, Minister Henry said, “This is a part of my
multi-modal approach to transport and ultimately I want us to move to
installation of cameras and the introduction of a school bus service which would
complement the work such as this which has gone on here in the town of
Old
Harbour.”
The Gutters to Freetown main road improvement was part of a
Periodic Maintenance Programme financed by the Road Maintenance Fund. It saw the
resurfacing of the entire ten kilometre corridor between Gutters and
Freetown at a cost of $141M and was
done by contractors Pavement and Structures Ltd.
Also speaking at the ceremony were MP for the area, Mr.
Everald Warmington who expressed thanks on behalf of the community for the
improvement of the town’s infrastructure, courtesy of the MTW and the NWA. He
said that the traffic lights would be particularly helpful with respect to the
regulation of the many taxi operators who ply their trade within the town.
Mayor for the St. Catherine capital,
Spanish
Town offered the vote of thanks.
For his part, CEO of the NWA said that the job came in on
time and within budget and was part of the wider road/traffic management
programme being embarked upon islandwide.
Mayor for the St. Catherine capital, Spanish Town offered the
vote of thanks.
The Gutters to Freetown
main road links Spanish
Town to Old
Harbour in south west St.
Catherine and forms part of the alternative route to Highway 2000. The
improvements on the road are expected to increase the life of the roadway by up
to 15 years.
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