FLOOD!

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LadyDeath

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Waterway: Bon Aventure Road, Gasparillo, under water yesterday. -Photos: TREVOR WATSON

Several people climbed on the hoods of their vehicles to escape flood waters and police set up a mobile unit to control traffic, as chaos broke out on the Solomon Hochoy in Central and South Trinidad yesterday.

The highway was turned into a single-lane and traffic piled up for miles for several hours.

There was havoc on the highway and in many parts of South and Central Trinidad, after more than two hours of torrential rains accompanied by thunder and lightning.

Thousands of people were said to be have been affected and the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Management was standing by for the waters to recede before going in with aid.

Residents in Point Fortin and Tabaquite were also said to have been hard hit and last night there were reports that flood waters were rising along the Penal-Quinam Road.

Hundreds of workers were sent home as several business places closed early.

A number of functions, including the public consultation on the proposed broadcasting code, which was scheduled to take place at City Hall, San Fernando, were cancelled. Several speakers from Port of Spain were unable to reach the venue because of the massive highway traffic pile-up.

At the Servol Advanced Skills Training Centre, just of the highway at Forres Park, Claxton Bay, about 35 cars were submerged in water. Martin Pacheco, executive director at the centre, said 70 teachers were attending a two-day training when the rain started.

"We were trapped inside the school. The classrooms were flooded and our cars cannot start because the water got inside and apparently damaged the engines," he said yesterday evening.

Pacheco said classes at the centre will be postponed for a week for clean up operations.

"There is debris in every classroom, so we would not be able to start classes until this is cleaned up," he said.

In the confusion, a Kiss Baking Company Limited van which was parked near school, and several other vehicles were looted by some villagers and other motorists, eyewitnesses said. The van was taking goods to supermarkets in Gasparillo, it was learned.

And in Gasparillo, a car was washed away into a river.

Daryl Ramroop said the heavy rains brought three feet of water into his garage, where his blue Mitsubishi Lancer was parked.

"I was inside the house and when I looked out to see what was going on I saw my car going down into the river next to our house. By the time I reached it was almost submerged into the water," he said.

Ramroop, a security guard, said neighbours helped him drag the car out of the river.

"But it cannot start because water got inside the bonnet and the engine," he said.

And a man returned home from work to find his house washed away in the flood.

Mootee Parsam, who lives at Forres Park, Claxton Bay, said his two-room house was dragged about five metres to the flyover.

"I could not believe it, my house was washed away with everything inside. I lost every thing I owned," he said.

Police set up the mobile post near the Claxton Bay overpass and allowed two-way traffic along the north-bound lane.

A Public Transportation Services Corporation (PTSC) bus, which was en route to Port of Spain from San Fernando, stalled along the highway, near Claxton Bay, with passengers inside.

A passenger, Joan Hinds, said the scenes she witnessed were unbelievable.

"Within 15 to 20 minutes cars were covered with water and people were standing on the hoods, some were taking the risk and walking out of the floods with water almost covering them. The bus could not move and water was seeping inside. A man who was inside the bus asked to get out. He placed his girlfriend on his shoulder and swam out," she said.

Joan Hinds, who lives at Pleasantville, said the passengers waited inside the bus until the water subsided. "We stayed inside there, frightened to get out. When the water went down, another bus came and we went inside that one and was on our way to Port of Spain," she said.

The stalled bus remained parked along the highway with almost five feet of water inside. Scores of cars, which were stalled by the flood waters, were pushed onto the shoulder.
 
Yea the part of the highway that was cut off is right down the road by me,and there is a mosque in the junction and everyone in the village know that there does flood but some idiot gone and park he car there and it got completely covered by the flood water,yuh didn't even know a car was park there.
 
is that real?? was it that bad?? these pic's or som1 really skilled in ps

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Wow flood real catch we this time.... So sorry for those under the water.... Even in Caparo had flood... This area never flood for about five years despite heavy rain falls prevously...
 
Yeah it seems like areas that didn't have flood getting flood out this time
 
Alyuh see this sun and feel the heat we getting these days... jus brace for the rain...it coming and real hard too
 
lawd dem pics harsh boy....and some ah dem men car drop rel low so even worst for them...they cant move in dat water!!!geez
 
I was going down south side when we had to turn back yes...if flood everywhere...these rains are sooo affecting us and agriculture right now! Farmers are raising crop prices to the max now :(



DESPITE light rainfall yesterday parts of Central and East Trinidad remained flooded as overburdened water courses began spilling over in Central while in the East the flood waters were slow to drain off.

A part of St Helena Village had been hit hard when from around 3 a.m. several Caroni River tributaries broke their banks, sending water into yards and houses.

The Meteorological Services stated yesterday morning that "there has been a much welcomed reprieve and improvement in weather conditions. Apart from a few brisk showers, conditions have been mostly fair" but those were not very comforting words to Santa Monica Village residents.

These residents began experiencing the lingering effects of an Inter Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) system that remained over Trinidad and Tobago up to Wednesday, according to the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Management (ODPM).

By yesterday, however, the ITCZ had dissipated according to reports from the United States-based, National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration.

Dulcie Ramsahai of Santa Monica, St Helena Village, said, "At 3 a.m. we heard a loud noise. My husband and I were sleeping. We got up just in time to see the water starting to come in."

"At that time," said Ramsahai, "the water was not yet in the house but the yard area but as time went on the water kept, rising, rising, rising."

She said,"It's not me alone, it's everybody. We really fed up and all we are asking is for help to clean the drains and cut the bush because every time rain falls we have to deal with this."

Santa Monica is largely an agricultural community. With lots of tractors around some residents were able to get in and out of their homes by hitching a ride with one affable tractor driver known as "Baba G".

"Is whole day I going up and down the road, if you could call it that," he laughed.

Some residents complained that they were not visited by their parliamentary representative, Dr Tim Gopeesingh, the ODPM or the Tunapuna/Piarco Regional Corporation.

Khadijah Ameen, chairman of the Corporation, could not be reached for comment.

In Vega de Oropouche in Sangre Grande flood waters from Wednesday remained yesterday.

Several banana and orange trees in an area known as Ollivierre Trace were covered by flood waters. All residents could do was wait until the waters subsided.

On Wednesday areas affected in the east included North Oropouche, Guaico/Tamana and Las Lomas No. 3.

In parts of Central Trinidad with the Caparo River overspilling its banks, areas such as Todds Road, Mamoral and Ravine Sable were inundated.
 
There mit be hope for the Caparo residents since Minister jack Warner announce that the Mamoral dam will be constructed soon. And the implemention of water pumps in POS and environs. I hope one day that flood will be a think of the pass.
 
Saturday’s massive flooding in Caparo and environs will speed up the Government’s plans to construct the Mamoral Dam. After heavy rain on Friday, and throughout Saturday, several parts of Caparo, Mamoral, Sharpe Road, Chickland Road, Santa Phillipa Road and parts of Brasso Caparo Valley Road were impassable, leaving hundreds of farmers, shoppers and students stranded. People who travel on the Brasso Caparo Valey Road to such communities as Mamoral Crossing, Mamoral Nos 1 and 2, Flanagin Town, Sharpe Road, Brasso, Tabaquite and Rio Claro had to wait several hours until the ravaging waters subsided from as high as four feet at some points.
 
YEa i saw how Brasso river was when i was coming home i was like WTF, i never saw the river this high it was a really frightening thing to know people living in these flood prone areas.
 
plz look out for flood today because rain has been falling since yesterday, be careful ppl
 
it hav flood by Caparo breeding unit for all d ppl who passin dey......yuh need to pass tru Gran Couva road!!!
 
11 people whose homes were flooded out during weekend rains were moved to an emergency shelter located at the Eastern Indoor Sporting Complex near the Eddie Hart grounds in Tacarigua.

Several others, according to the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Management (ODPM), refused to move but the organisation said they were on stand-by and willing to even provide vehicles for those wishing to leave their stricken homes,Farmers in the Aranjuez area were hit hard, Between Sunday and yesterday clean-up efforts were underway in the St Augustine, Tunapuna, Macoya, Golden Grove, Caroni, Aranguez, Maracas and Bamboo Settlement areas

Contact numbers for those needing shelter are 662-1537 and 640-1885.
 
i c so much flood in Caroni/St Helena area this time eh.. the people had to be relocated to shelters... imagine u work so hard for what u have and in one flood u lose everything.. at least the Min of the people/ODPM/Fire service etc helping a little. but a grant cant do much so I suggest that the business people give some material to these people. it will go a long way
 
By the way if somebody living in a FLOOD PRONE area why they building FLAT house??????? Jus a thought
 
People building flat houses because it cost less to build, so people don't have the money to build these high house and people would ah expect the flooding to be dealt with.
 
People could at least afford the pillars and build their house on a height.. that would definitely keep out flood damages..
 
dis was my yard on Divali day!!!
 

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