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Cdema Boss Warns Residents Not To Let Guard Down

Source: SXMIslandTime 16 Aug 2016 12:20 PM

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados – As the Caribbean heads into what is traditionally known as the “peak” of the Atlantic Hurricane Season, there’s yet another appeal for Barbados and the rest of the region to remain vigilant.

“We have heard this, [that] God is a Bajan; God is a Trini; God maybe a Jamaican; He maybe an Anguillan; He is all of us but that doesn’t mean that we are not going to be impacted by the vagaries of natural disasters,” warned Ronald Jackson, the head of the Barbados based Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA).

Its two and half months into the season which has been somewhat “quiet” but Jackson told Barbados TODAY, that is no reason for the region to become lax.

“The decision as to whether we are caught up in an emergency response or dealing with a disaster is going to be very much built around how much at the household level, at the community level and nationally we are vigilant . . .  build our capacity to respond and our ability to prepare for these events as well as our efforts to mitigate and reduce the impact on our society,” the CDEMA executive director explained.

Jackson pointed to a number of out of season storms that have impacted the region during the last few years as examples why the slow start to the season should not be taken lightly.

“We are in the hurricane season, it started early, it means that we are seeing a different kind of action happening within our region. Over the last five years or so we have seen out of season storms. What would have been typical rain events become major rainfall events, resulting in flooding and displacement leading to significant impact on the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of member states,” he told Barbados TODAY.

“So, we can’t be too comforted by the fact that at this point things have been a bit quiet; it is not a sign that the rest of the season is going to be quiet.

“We have to recognize that as Caribbean people these are episodes that we will experience over the time of life in the Caribbean. It was so in the past, it is so in the present and it is going to be so in the future. Se we do encourage our Caribbean people, households, communities, governments to really be vigilante and to raise our level of preparedness for these events,” he added.

So far Jackson revealed that the CDEMA has not been called by its member countries to give any detailed help apart from Belize which requested that the emergency response grant be activated on its behalf following the passage of Hurricane Earl.

Meantime, Jackson who is in Belize getting a first-hand look at the situation there said his office continued to put the necessary measures in place for the season.

“As we continue to move to what is traditionally called the peak of the hurricane season CDEMA continues to strengthen its regional capacity through training of its specialized teams. Next week we will conduct what we call a webinar with a number of the persons we would have trained already as members of our CARICOM damage assessment team. So we are continuing to hone the skills of our regional response mechanism,” he said. (Barbados TODAY)


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