Senior Reporter
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Three weeks after cable thieves plunged the Housing Development Corporation (HDC) Fairfield, Princes Town community into darkness, residents are now facing another crisis after cable thieves crippled the community’s wastewater treatment plant. The discovery was made around 8.25 am yesterday when an HDC employee found the plant, which services hundreds of households, vandalised.
The main electrical control office was broken into, and a quantity of electrical cables connected to control panels, a standby generator, and two step-up/step-down transformers were all missing. Electrical cables were also missing from two panel boxes at the rear of the plant. Police said the thieves pried open one of the doors.
In an interview with Guardian Media, resident Kevin Fraser, leader of the Fairfield Community Watch Group, said that around 8.30 am he was informed about the break-in at the plant and visited the site, where he was told the cables that keep the plant operating had been cut, crippling its operations. “I guess they did it for the copper,” he said.
Concerned about the ramifications for the community, Fraser said he was informed that if the treatment plant does not resume operations within a reasonable time, it could result in sewage backing up into the streets and eventually into people’s homes.
From the lack of police patrols to poorly maintained infrastructure, overgrown bushes and inadequate street lighting, he said they have brought these issues to the attention of officials, but he claimed they have failed to address them.
“It is an open playing field for the elements as they fully understand that we do not actually have the full support of the different agencies and protective services.”
While residents do not condone vigilantism, he said they have no choice but to take matters into their own hands to safeguard themselves, their properties and the community.
Fraser said while Princes Town MP Dr Aiyna Ali maintains regular communication with residents and has helped “solve a lot of issues,” there are still major concerns that remain unresolved.
“I believe that her hands are also full and her resources are limited to a point to rectify every single issue that we bring to her table.”
He said on Tuesday, residents are expected to meet with HDC, the TTPS, WASA and other stakeholders, and they hope that once these matters are ventilated, they will be properly addressed.
Another resident, Debbie Mitchell-Richardson, called for the resumption of security patrols in the neighbourhood. Concerned about the health effects if the treatment plant does not resume operations in a timely manner, she said, “To flush the toilet that might back up. I have a child who now do a surgery, this is very unsafe for him.”
Recalling the vandalism at the T&TEC Distribution South Area on June 19 that left residents without electricity for several hours, she said, “This is not safe for us in the back here.” She also complained that most homes have open yards, adding that not everyone can afford to install CCTV cameras.
“They realise it have no patrol, no camera, open access, anyone could walk in and walk back out. And most of these homes is single parents, hardworking people who work 24 hours, doctors, nurse police. When you go to work and come back, you realise things missing from your place, so it is a target for them,” she lamented.
When Guardian Media visited the site yesterday, the perimeter of the wastewater treatment plant was overgrown with tall bushes, and a large hole was visible in the wire fence surrounding the isolated facility.
Police officers were also on the scene.