Pigeon Point development
Posted: Wed Jan 18, 2006 12:16 am
From Tobago News (Monday, January 16th 2006) we get a positive signal on Pigeon Point's development, interesting to follow up the changes, Steve (W), maybe you could get some inside information next month:
Clean-up of Pigeon Pt
Monday, January 16th 2006 http://www.thetobagonews.com/index.pl/a ... id=5356928
CEPEP Tobago linked up with CEPEP Trinidad last weekend to carry out a massive clean up of the Pigeon Point beach and surrounding areas.
Twenty CEPEP workers from Tobago were joined by ninety of their counterparts from Trinidad in the three-day exercise mounted by the Tobago House of Assembly (THA) in conjunction with the Solid Waste Management Company Limited (SWMCOL). The nearly $.2 million cost of the exercise was shared jointly by the THA and SWMCOL, according to the company's Executive Chairman Ray Braithwaite.
The workers arrived in the island on Friday with their own equipment including two backhoes, two nine-ton dump trucks, five other vehicles, brush cutters, cutlasses, rakes, compost machinery, wheel barrows, forks, shovels, axe, 15 tents, cuts and even a computer to carry out their assignment. They slept and dined in the tents assembled on the spacious grounds near Windhole, while the Assembly supplied meals and entertainment.
When the crew left the Pigeon Point Heritage Park on Monday a large portion of the 60-acre resort took on a new look. They had moved over 50 truckloads of rubbish to the dump at Studley Park and ground up hundreds of pounds more in their compost machines.
Chief Secretary Orville London told the launch of the massive exercise that the Assembly said very little of the condition in which it found Pigeon Point on its purchase in May because it did not consider that relevant. "What is relevant is the state to which we want to bring Pigeon Point. We thought that the best way to do it rather than in tranches is to at least make a significant break through in a short period and recognising that the Trinidad arm of CEPEP had quite a lot of experience in Grenada treating with these massive exercises we decided to enlist their assistance and they would be working in conjunction with us," he said.
Clean-up of Pigeon Pt
Monday, January 16th 2006 http://www.thetobagonews.com/index.pl/a ... id=5356928
CEPEP Tobago linked up with CEPEP Trinidad last weekend to carry out a massive clean up of the Pigeon Point beach and surrounding areas.
Twenty CEPEP workers from Tobago were joined by ninety of their counterparts from Trinidad in the three-day exercise mounted by the Tobago House of Assembly (THA) in conjunction with the Solid Waste Management Company Limited (SWMCOL). The nearly $.2 million cost of the exercise was shared jointly by the THA and SWMCOL, according to the company's Executive Chairman Ray Braithwaite.
The workers arrived in the island on Friday with their own equipment including two backhoes, two nine-ton dump trucks, five other vehicles, brush cutters, cutlasses, rakes, compost machinery, wheel barrows, forks, shovels, axe, 15 tents, cuts and even a computer to carry out their assignment. They slept and dined in the tents assembled on the spacious grounds near Windhole, while the Assembly supplied meals and entertainment.
When the crew left the Pigeon Point Heritage Park on Monday a large portion of the 60-acre resort took on a new look. They had moved over 50 truckloads of rubbish to the dump at Studley Park and ground up hundreds of pounds more in their compost machines.
Chief Secretary Orville London told the launch of the massive exercise that the Assembly said very little of the condition in which it found Pigeon Point on its purchase in May because it did not consider that relevant. "What is relevant is the state to which we want to bring Pigeon Point. We thought that the best way to do it rather than in tranches is to at least make a significant break through in a short period and recognising that the Trinidad arm of CEPEP had quite a lot of experience in Grenada treating with these massive exercises we decided to enlist their assistance and they would be working in conjunction with us," he said.

