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 Brikama Area Council ,Failing the people ?

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toubab1020 Posted - 26 Oct 2018 : 21:25:31
Hmmmmmmm...VERY STRONG STUFF Sulayman Jammeh is obviously not a happy chappy. Still it's politics all talk NO action.
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October 26, 2018

By Sulayman Jammeh

Ever since the political dust gently settled down, many people virtually forgot or are care-less about the assertive pontifications projected by our political aspirants on their beautiful manifestoes during the campaign trail. Well, I don’t forget. I could still vividly remember the promises made by our chairman (B.A.C). Of course, he had beautiful plans on how to make Brikama market great again: admirable, neat and economically vibrant. He also wants to do something about the poor road networks especially the feeder roads linking the market to the rest of Brikama. Waste management system was another plan on his manifesto. What a tremendous facelift if implemented.

Well, one needs not to be a rocket scientist to grasp some basic facts; neither do you need a weather man to tell you where the wind is blowing. Some basic things are clearly written on the walls. I can’t get a word to describe the current precarious situation of Brikama market. Calling it pathetic or disheartening is an understatement: it’s plain shocking. The reason why am more particular about the market is not anything peculiar but because of the revenue it creates for the council. I keep wondering where all the millions of revenue collected from the vast business entities go to. Of course not forgetting the daily D5 collected from young girls selling pure water and even from the wheelbarrow porters in the market. Calling a spade a farm implement doesn’t describe it, it can’t be even called a garden fork BUT only a spade, period! If the huge revenue collected from Brikama market cannot make Brikama market a conducive and a healthy place, then something is obviously wrong somewhere. Any interested observer might wonder if it is a case of misplaced priorities or poorly defined strategic thinking.

What is even more frustrating and heart aching is when it rains for just two minutes; the gutters are turned into disgusting eyesore emitting highly obnoxious odour which permeates the environment. The drainage cavities are virtually all blocked, slurry amassed, thus rendering our footpaths impassable. It is apparent that the waste bins are not strategically located for easy collection and the waste is not sorted out. There has to be a technology to desegregate waste into organic, inorganic or toxic before disposal to allow for proper management. Sometimes vendors do a general clearing of their area of the market, I want to tell them ‘congratulation’. I can’t cast the blame on the junior officer who collects tax (duties) daily or the sellers in the market, but I have to blame the custodian of the market. From my own viewpoint, the conditions of this great market are NOT quite different from its previous status. Each time it rains, people keep galloping and limping like horses and frogs on pieces of stepping stones just to avoid muddy stagnant waters found at all the nooks and crannies of the market. Sometimes I feet like cancelling my purpose of going to the market but to go to the chairman’s office and tell him ‘Sir what’s your real plan for our market, after almost more than fraction of a year in office?’
When I compared and contrast the modus-operandi and modus-Vivendi of Kanifing Municipal Council and my own Brikama Area Council, I do not only get tongue-tied, but also bemused with the huge disparity. Leadership is summarised in one keyword which is ACTION.

As a leader of our noble council, your only difference from the rest of us is your capacity to make DECISIONS and the opportunity you are privileged with to take ACTION. Mr. Chairman, the only difference that distinguished you from any Tom Dick and Harry is the onus that it is with you; nothing else. Always remember THE PEOPLE who confidently casted their marbles in your metallic ballot drums, while they sit patiently, wishing and praying that you will ultimately become a knight in a shining armour to salvage them from their unbearable conditions. I can’t really tell why things are so slow in transforming the market, but you and the Chief Executive officer (CEO) of the council have to work closely. If there are corrupt officers in your council, sack them. But remember a proverb; discipline cannot discipline discipline, if discipline is NOT discipline. Be the change you want to see as Mahatma Ghandi rightly put it.

Of course I can imagine the enormous challenges you might be confronted with, because even in the house of masquerades, human reside. If there are staff in your mist who wish nothing but to back pedal your progress, relieve them. Most importantly, if there are pentagonal pegs occupying octagonal holes in your noble council, I can tell you without an iota of doubt that we are NOT moving fraction of an inch to sustainable progress. In fact, the latter is the most paramount, simply because for any organisation to attain its goals; the human resource should possess the prerequisite level of competence, ingenuity, skill and attitude to steer the wheel of that very organisation. Mr. Chairman, I wouldn’t just highlight the deplorable nature of our precious market without advancing my little ideas on HOW to mitigate the challenges and move forward.

I understand clearly the nature of the market because I criss-cross there daily and also observe with keen precision. Looking at the market from the engineers’ and planners’ microscope, it has a major engineering and planning errors, yes it does. A market can’t be planned like Jokor Night Club where people come in, dance and go home. A market is a SYSTEM of interwoven activities. There is a term in principles of planning called ZONING, where every section of the market has its specified function and purpose and nothing else. Let me give a quick example. If Nfamara Fofana comes to buy a book and a pen in the market, he should not bump into Musukuta Nyaranding Maraneh who came to buy fresh tilapia fish for her husband since they came for a completely different purposes. Even in an organisation, there is usually zoning of offices like record office, account office, human resource office, public relation office, facilities office, internal audit etc. Now let’s assume all these offices are in one main hall, what will happen? That’s a similar behaviour you see in our unplanned market. Because the market is not zoned, so everybody has to be searching like a retired police detective spotting what he or she wants to buy.

Some people might argue to say that the market is too small and over populated that is why nothing can be properly organised. However, I want to debunk that theory and build my argument from a different spectrum. Our market is not well PLANNED and it lacks a SYSTEM. The best time to do that is NOW. Yes, now, I mean. Looking at the growth rate of West Coast Region is alarming; its growth pole rapidly growing which can be closely associated with the current menace in the market. Therefore planning the entire orientation of the market from its genesis to revelation is quintessential.

Market policies and regulations need to be enforced without fear, favour or ill will. The allocation of selling spot needs to be revisited. Since one will just wake up one morning and see a desperate business man erecting an ugly canteen at one corner of the market without taking precursory measures. Usually they don’t care whether they are building on gutters and drainage cavities meant for water to pass.
There are government residential quarters in the market too, which I believe when moved can create market expansion. The various entrances and foot paths in the market should have specified dimensions, putting into perspective architectural anthropometric and frequently monitored; but it will be difficult to maintain that if some officers take bribes from business men to allocate them places meant for passage of customers, water or waste collection trucks.

Building a fish market in the heart of an already congested and polluted market was a monumental mistake and still serves as a painful scourge than a blessing. I wonder whether the feasibility studies and Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) were done properly, because nothing smells more hazardously even from miles away, than that fish market. It needs to be moved for the market to make good use of itself.
It’s indeed a piety to see cleaners from the area council to be cleaning without protective gargets to save themselves from the harmful waste. Mr Chairman, you have to protect and motivate your staff if you want to get the best of them.

http://standard.gm/site/2018/10/26/brikama-area-council-should-wake-up/

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