Local News

HDC garbage crisis

13 December 2025
This content originally appeared on Trinidad Guardian.
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SHAL­IZA HAS­SANALI

Se­nior In­ves­tiga­tive Re­porter

Shal­iza.has­[email protected]

Sev­er­al Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion (HDC) com­mu­ni­ties are fac­ing a grow­ing moun­tain of trash as the fes­tive sea­son ap­proach­es.

The sit­u­a­tion reached a tip­ping point for res­i­dents of Cleaver Heights, Ari­ma, af­ter HDC failed to pro­vide garbage col­lec­tion for eight days, cre­at­ing a health haz­ard and eye­sore for 388 home­own­ers. The ser­vice was re­port­ed­ly dis­con­tin­ued with­out res­i­dents be­ing no­ti­fied.

The pile-up came just days af­ter HDC chair­man Feeroz Khan an­nounced that the cor­po­ra­tion would end con­tracts with at least 50 main­te­nance providers and their em­ploy­ees by year’s end, hint­ing at pos­si­ble fur­ther staff cuts. Khan at­trib­uted the move to a decade of se­vere fi­nan­cial mis­man­age­ment.

On De­cem­ber 5, the Tu­na­puna Pi­ar­co Re­gion­al Cor­po­ra­tion (TPRC) in­ter­vened to re­move the waste from Cleaver Heights. Since then, no rub­bish has been col­lect­ed.

Three oth­er HDC com­mu­ni­ties—two in El Do­ra­do and Mal­oney Gar­dens—are al­so bat­tling over­flow­ing bins, ro­dents, cock­roach­es, flies, and stray dogs scav­eng­ing through garbage bags.

Last Mon­day, TPRC chair­man Josi­ah Austin held an emer­gency meet­ing with Cleaver Heights res­i­dents, ex­plain­ing that his cor­po­ra­tion could on­ly as­sist with rub­bish col­lec­tion for De­cem­ber due to a $4 mil­lion cut in the UNC Gov­ern­ment’s garbage dis­pos­al al­lo­ca­tion.

This year the TPRC re­ceived $42 mil­lion for waste dis­pos­al, which was re­duced to $38 mil­lion in the 2026 bud­get. Austin warned that the garbage cri­sis is af­fect­ing mul­ti­ple HDC com­mu­ni­ties.

“The is­sue un­fold­ed be­cause HDC con­trac­tors have walked off,” Austin said. He added that san­i­ta­tion con­tracts man­aged by HDC are set to end on De­cem­ber 31.

“So if con­tracts are not ten­dered in time, what will hap­pen to the oth­er de­vel­op­ments with on­go­ing agree­ments? This is­sue has now spread. You are one of the first af­fect­ed, but many more will fol­low,” Austin told res­i­dents.

He de­tailed the scale of the prob­lem: “I have Goya and Mad­hoo Heights in El Do­ra­do, and Mal­oney Gar­dens… you can imag­ine the sit­u­a­tion there. I had to ad­dress that is­sue and rush here to meet with you. I still need to at­tend to oth­er de­vel­op­ments,” he said.

“I don’t be­lieve this should be our re­spon­si­bil­i­ty, but we met with you be­cause at least 20 de­vel­op­ments are now fac­ing sim­i­lar chal­lenges, one by one. Our bud­get has been cut, we’ve had de­creas­es while oth­er cor­po­ra­tions re­ceived in­creas­es, and it would be im­prac­ti­cal to as­sume full re­spon­si­bil­i­ty for all these ar­eas,” Austin added.

Cor­po­ra­tion un­der­fund­ed

The Tu­na­puna Pi­ar­co Re­gion­al Cor­po­ra­tion (TPRC) is con­trolled by the PNM.

Chair­man Josi­ah Austin said that bud­get in­creas­es were redi­rect­ed to the Pe­nal and Princes Town Cor­po­ra­tions, which are un­der UNC con­trol. As a re­sult, the TPRC is now scal­ing back ser­vices, in­clud­ing garbage col­lec­tion from schools and main roads.

“Those were ad­di­tion­al ser­vices we ac­com­mo­dat­ed in the past. It’s hard to add more de­vel­op­ments or more spaces with the bud­get we have right now,” Austin told Guardian Me­dia fol­low­ing a meet­ing with res­i­dents. He added that an as­sess­ment was un­der­way and that the cor­po­ra­tion would con­sult with busi­ness cham­bers to ad­dress the is­sue.

Austin said the TPRC main­tains a list of pri­vate and HDC de­vel­op­ments re­quest­ing garbage col­lec­tion, but the cor­po­ra­tion lacks the funds, trucks, and man­pow­er to han­dle all re­quests. At present, pri­or­i­ty must be giv­en to crit­i­cal ar­eas. The TPRC pro­vides garbage col­lec­tion across its 16 elec­toral dis­tricts.

When res­i­dents asked how TPRC could as­sist their com­mu­ni­ty, Austin ex­plained, “The process has to go in­ter-min­is­te­r­i­al. The Min­istry of Plan­ning, in col­lab­o­ra­tion with the Min­istry of Rur­al De­vel­op­ment and Lo­cal Gov­ern­ment and the Min­istry of Hous­ing, must agree, and they will pro­vide the req­ui­site fund­ing.”

He warned that the process was not sim­ple, es­pe­cial­ly dur­ing the Yule­tide sea­son, which brings a surge in waste.

Austin al­so made it clear that HDC must play its part by send­ing teams to clear the rub­bish.

Join­ing Austin were Frank Ali, rep­re­sen­ta­tive of the Arou­ca/Lopinot con­stituen­cy of­fice; Cleaver/D’Abadie coun­cil­lor Shuquila Clarke; and the TPRC’s Pub­lic Health Of­fi­cer, Natasha John­son. Clarke ad­vised res­i­dents to es­tab­lish a man­age­ment com­mit­tee to co­or­di­nate so­lu­tions.

Some res­i­dents in the Cleaver Heights What­sApp group sug­gest­ed hir­ing a con­trac­tor to man­age garbage col­lec­tion ahead of the Christ­mas rush.

An at­tor­ney and res­i­dent of HDC’s Tre­strail Lands de­vel­op­ment in D’Abadie re­count­ed how 100 sin­gle-unit own­ers in her com­mu­ni­ty had been left scram­bling af­ter HDC abrupt­ly stopped garbage col­lec­tion a few months ago.

“In that case, we es­tab­lished a man­age­ment com­mit­tee, wrote to HDC for the main­te­nance fees we had been pay­ing, and asked the TPRC to pick up the rub­bish tem­porar­i­ly. Then we sought quotes from san­i­ta­tion com­pa­nies,” she said.

One com­pa­ny quot­ed $27,000 per month for twice-week­ly col­lec­tion, while an­oth­er of­fered a more eco­nom­i­cal $10,000 per month, which the com­mit­tee ac­cept­ed.

Some Cleaver Heights town­house own­ers not­ed that for over a decade, res­i­dents had been pay­ing month­ly main­te­nance fees of $200–$300 and ques­tioned where the funds had gone.

On Tues­day, Austin up­dat­ed res­i­dents via What­sApp, say­ing he spoke with HDC’s deputy man­ag­ing di­rec­tor and “we agreed to as­sist them in one large area, which is Green­vale.” HDC would col­lect garbage in Cleaver, Goya, and Mal­oney, all in ur­gent need of clean-up.

“I have asked them for a sched­ule so res­i­dents can be in­formed. They promised to li­aise with their teams and get back to me in the morn­ing. This is ex­pect­ed to con­tin­ue un­til the end of Jan­u­ary, by which time new con­trac­tors should be in place,” Austin said.

On Wednes­day, he pro­vid­ed a fur­ther up­date that HDC had agreed to ser­vice the area “to­day and to­mor­row (Thurs­day),” but no col­lec­tion oc­curred. The chair­man has now promised to send a truck and crew on Mon­day to re­move garbage that has ac­cu­mu­lat­ed over ten days.

Guardian Me­dia con­tact­ed HDC chair­man Feeroz Khan with ques­tions and sent two fol­low-ups re­gard­ing the garbage cri­sis, but he did not re­spond.

(((BOX)))

Mal­oney mess

Flies buzzed in and out of rub­bish crammed in­to the 12 dump­sters of Mal­oney Gar­dens. The stench of de­cay­ing waste filled the air, while huge rats scur­ried through the trash and cock­roach­es crawled among the colour­ful garbage bags on Wednes­day.

This has been the dai­ly re­al­i­ty for hun­dreds of Mal­oney Gar­dens res­i­dents for the past sev­en months, a re­sult of HDC’s in­ad­e­quate garbage col­lec­tion.

Matthew Pe­ters, pres­i­dent of the Mal­oney Gar­dens Com­mu­ni­ty Coun­cil, de­scribed the on­go­ing health haz­ard as “un­bear­able and dis­heart­en­ing.”

Mal­oney Gar­dens com­pris­es 21 apart­ment build­ings, each hous­ing 62 ten­ants. “That’s over 1,300 ten­ants liv­ing here,” Pe­ters said. The com­mu­ni­ty al­so has rough­ly 3,000 sin­gle-unit homes.

“That’s over 4,000 homes in our com­mu­ni­ty, yet the 12 dump­sters in the car parks are al­ways over­flow­ing. Peo­ple from out­side the com­mu­ni­ty al­so dump their garbage here, which on­ly wors­ens the health prob­lem.”

HDC is sup­posed to col­lect trash twice week­ly, but Pe­ters said the ser­vice is of­ten pro­vid­ed on­ly once a week—or not at all—lead­ing to piles of waste.

“The dump­sters are al­ways full, and the stench is un­bear­able,” he said.

When the sit­u­a­tion reach­es a cri­sis, the TPRC steps in to clear the rub­bish. “I know the TPRC is over­whelmed at the mo­ment. They can’t ser­vice all these HDC com­mu­ni­ties—it’s too much,” Pe­ters not­ed.

With Christ­mas ap­proach­ing, the prob­lem has be­come even more press­ing, as the com­pound sur­round­ing the 12 car parks re­mains lit­tered with waste.

“There’s no oth­er place to put it. Imag­ine Christ­mas morn­ing—smelling your nice ham bak­ing in your kitchen while out­side it stinks of rot­ting garbage. How can any­one en­joy Christ­mas in that en­vi­ron­ment?” Pe­ters asked.

He said the coun­cil in­tends to write to HDC to stress the im­pact of the sit­u­a­tion on both com­mu­ni­ty life and pub­lic health. “They have to get their act to­geth­er,” he said.

Pe­ters al­so crit­i­cised the UNC gov­ern­ment for mov­ing too quick­ly on re­forms. “It’s just too much. With all these changes, many peo­ple are be­ing neg­a­tive­ly af­fect­ed. I have friends and fam­i­ly who vot­ed for UNC, but now they re­gret it.”

Re­flect­ing on the po­lit­i­cal fall­out, Pe­ters said: “When UNC won the elec­tion, Mal­oney did not win. To me, when UNC won, a lot of peo­ple in the coun­try end­ed up los­ing.”

(((BOX)))

Cor­po­ra­tions wor­ried about pub­lic health risk

Port-of-Spain May­or Chin­ua Al­leyne said while HDC is re­spon­si­ble for clear­ing rub­bish from its hous­ing de­vel­op­ments, his cor­po­ra­tion oc­ca­sion­al­ly steps in to pro­vide re­lief to res­i­dents.

How­ev­er, Al­leyne not­ed that a sig­nif­i­cant re­duc­tion in the 2026 bud­get al­lo­ca­tion for garbage col­lec­tion lim­its their ca­pac­i­ty.

“We would not be in any po­si­tion to take on any ad­di­tion­al re­spon­si­bil­i­ty,” he said.

The cor­po­ra­tion’s garbage al­lo­ca­tion was cut from $21 mil­lion last year to $13 mil­lion in 2026—a de­crease Al­leyne de­scribed as “too dras­tic.” The re­duc­tion al­so forced the cor­po­ra­tion to cut garbage col­lec­tion in east Port-of-Spain from four days a week to three. The four-day sched­ule will be main­tained on­ly dur­ing the Christ­mas sea­son, af­ter which the three-day sched­ule will re­sume in Jan­u­ary.

Al­leyne warned this change could neg­a­tive­ly af­fect small san­i­ta­tion con­trac­tors who em­ploy lo­cal res­i­dents. He said he had al­ready in­formed the Down­town Own­ers and Mer­chants As­so­ci­a­tion (DO­MA) about the fi­nan­cial chal­lenges.

“The re­duc­tion in the num­ber of col­lec­tion days has a ma­te­r­i­al im­pact on these con­trac­tors’ op­er­a­tions and their abil­i­ty to con­tribute to the lo­cal econ­o­my. It is a sig­nif­i­cant chal­lenge. But the re­sources we have are what they are—we have to adapt to the new re­al­i­ty,” he said.

Al­leyne al­so high­light­ed the pub­lic health im­pli­ca­tions of re­duced garbage col­lec­tion.

“There is an ob­vi­ous pub­lic health risk, which is why we con­tin­ue to raise this is­sue and ad­vo­cate for bet­ter ser­vices. We don’t need less garbage col­lec­tion in the city; we need more.”

Siparia Re­gion­al Cor­po­ra­tion chair­man Dood­nath Mayrhoo and Princes Town Re­gion­al Cor­po­ra­tion chair­man Gowrie Roop­nar­ine said HDC had not asked their cor­po­ra­tions to man­age waste in hous­ing de­vel­op­ments in their ar­eas.

Point Fortin Bor­ough Cor­po­ra­tion May­or Clyde James said the sit­u­a­tion in his ju­ris­dic­tion is less se­vere than in Tu­na­puna Pi­ar­co. “While we have some sites, I don’t think it’s as bad as the Tu­na­puna Cor­po­ra­tion. They have more HDC sites than we do,” he said.

Guardian Me­dia reached out to the chair­men and may­ors of the oth­er eight re­gion­al cor­po­ra­tions, but they did not re­spond.

HDC waste dis­pos­al con­tracts

Ac­cord­ing to HDC doc­u­ments de­tail­ing 2025 ex­pen­di­ture, three com­pa­nies re­ceived con­tract ex­ten­sions on Jan­u­ary 17 un­der the PNM gov­ern­ment for month­ly bulk waste dis­pos­al ser­vices at Mal­oney Gar­dens, Cleaver Heights, and La Goya hous­ing de­vel­op­ments.

The com­pa­nies—Pi­cal Ser­vices Lim­it­ed, Costar Trans­port & Con­struc­tion Lim­it­ed, and Ge­lis­ter En­ter­pris­es Lim­it­ed—were con­tract­ed for ser­vices from Jan­u­ary to De­cem­ber 2025. HDC records of con­tracts award­ed be­tween late April and late Sep­tem­ber in­di­cate that no new waste dis­pos­al con­tracts were is­sued dur­ing that pe­ri­od, while it re­mains un­clear if any were award­ed be­tween Oc­to­ber and ear­ly De­cem­ber.

On Jan­u­ary 17, Pi­cal Ser­vices Lim­it­ed re­ceived an ex­ten­sion con­tract worth $203,175 for bulk waste dis­pos­al at Mal­oney Gar­dens. Costar Trans­port & Con­struc­tion Lim­it­ed was award­ed $205,411.50 for month­ly waste dis­pos­al at the same de­vel­op­ment. Mean­while, Ge­lis­ter En­ter­pris­es Lim­it­ed re­ceived con­tracts for Cleaver Heights and La Goya, val­ued at $53,716.50 and $25,155 re­spec­tive­ly.

Com­pa­ny reg­istry doc­u­ments show that Pi­cal Ser­vices Lim­it­ed is owned by two close rel­a­tives of Op­po­si­tion Sen­a­tor Fos­ter Cum­mings: his wife, Juli­et Cum­mings, and daugh­ter, Abi­o­la Cum­mings. The sen­a­tor has re­peat­ed­ly de­nied any wrong­do­ing by the com­pa­ny.

“Both com­pa­nies men­tioned have been do­ing busi­ness with the gov­ern­ment for years, cer­tain­ly pre­dat­ing my Cab­i­net and par­lia­men­tary ap­point­ments. Ten­der­ing pro­ce­dures are presided over by the board and man­age­ment of the HDC, and one ex­pects that all le­gal re­quire­ments are ad­hered to in the award of every HDC con­tract, in­clud­ing those you have high­light­ed, which ap­pear to be ex­ten­sions of ex­ist­ing con­tracts,” Cum­mings told Guardian Me­dia in a Sep­tem­ber in­ter­view.

Costar Trans­port & Con­struc­tion Lim­it­ed is owned by en­tre­pre­neurs Khaleel and Coreen Stafford and was reg­is­tered in 2012. Ge­lis­ter En­ter­pris­es Lim­it­ed, owned by Nigel John St Louis and Aff­isha Kayan St Louis, was reg­is­tered in 2010.

Ac­cord­ing to HDC doc­u­ments list­ing con­tracts award­ed in 2024 and 2025, 82 con­tract ex­ten­sions were grant­ed for month­ly bulk waste dis­pos­al ser­vices un­der the PNM gov­ern­ment on Jan­u­ary 17, 2025. These con­tracts, with a com­bined val­ue of $3.8 mil­lion, were for ser­vices to be pro­vid­ed be­tween Jan­u­ary and De­cem­ber 2025, with 15 con­tracts val­ued at $50,000 or more.

Con­tracts for PNM sup­port­ers

Doc­u­ments show that the five com­pa­nies with the high­est sin­gle waste dis­pos­al con­tract awards were Rivulet In­vest­ment Group, Sure Serv Lim­it­ed, Pi­cal Ser­vices, Kly­don En­ter­pris­es Lim­it­ed, and Costar Trans­port & Con­struc­tion.

Trinidad & To­ba­go Land­scap­ing Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed, owned by Nor­man and Na­tal­ie Gabriel—the wife and fa­ther of PNM fi­nancier and busi­ness­man An­drew Gabriel—re­ceived five con­tract ex­ten­sions val­ued at $336,119. Three of these cov­ered Ex­change Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment, Pow­der Mag­a­zine Phase 2, and Barataria Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment Phas­es 1 and 2.

Good­vibes & Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed, owned by Sea Lots com­mu­ni­ty leader and en­tre­pre­neur Ken­roy Dop­well, ob­tained four con­tracts for Pi­o­neer Dri­ve, Ridgeview Heights, Vieux Forte Build­ing A, and Vieux Forte Build­ings B, C, and D, val­ued at $62,468.

De­bros Mar­ket­ing and Ser­vices Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed, owned by PNM Vice Chair for San Fer­nan­do West Nigel Cleghorn, re­ceived a waste dis­pos­al ex­ten­sion at Ridge­wood Gar­dens Phase 1 worth $12,577.

Dar­wen Lim­it­ed, di­rect­ed by I95.5 FM host Dar­i­an Mar­celle and for­mer Port-of-Spain al­der­man Wen­dell Stephen, re­ceived an ex­ten­sion at Hi­ron­delle Street Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment val­ued at $36,180. An­oth­er com­pa­ny where Stephen is list­ed as a di­rec­tor, MGM Con­struc­tion Lim­it­ed, was award­ed three con­tracts at the Leon & Do­ra­ta Streets, Mal­abar, and Rose­wood Gar­dens Hous­ing De­vel­op­ments, to­tal­ing $58,131.

Vir­go Con­sul­tants Lim­it­ed, owned by for­mer Na­tion­al Agri­cul­tur­al Mar­ket­ing and De­vel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion (Namde­v­co) Chair­man and for­mer PNM tem­po­rary chair­man Wayne In­niss, re­ceived four con­tracts for Mon Re­pos, Tar­o­dale Hills Phas­es I and II, and Tarou­ba Heights Phas­es I and II, worth $137,374. In­niss was Namde­v­co chair­man at the time of the awards.

Five com­pa­nies—Rivulet In­vest­ment Group, Sure Serv Lim­it­ed, Pi­cal Ser­vices, Kly­don En­ter­pris­es Lim­it­ed, and Austin Rogers Hold­ings & Con­struc­tion Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed—have re­port­ed busi­ness as­so­ci­a­tions or links with Op­po­si­tion Sen­a­tor Fos­ter Cum­mings.

Pi­cal Ser­vices re­ceived four con­tracts to­tal­ing $533,961, cov­er­ing Lisa Gar­dens & Em­ba­cadare Hous­ing Es­tates De­vel­op­ment, Cane Street and Ol­era Heights Hous­ing De­vel­op­ments, Ed­in­burgh South Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment, and Cou­va North De­vel­op­ment.

Rivulet In­vest­ment Group, whose di­rec­tors are the wife and daugh­ter of the PNM Gen­er­al Sec­re­tary, re­ceived a con­tract ex­ten­sion worth $201,206. Kly­don En­ter­pris­es, with di­rec­tors Donet­ta Pierre and One­ka May­ers, was award­ed two con­tracts val­ued at $410,287. Pierre was for­mer­ly sec­re­tary of Cum­mings and As­so­ciates Lim­it­ed, owned by Cum­mings and his wife, though she de­nied any busi­ness as­so­ci­a­tion with him.

Austin Rogers of Austin Rogers Hold­ings Con­struc­tion Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed (AR Hold­ings) and Cum­mings are long­time busi­ness as­so­ciates, al­though Rogers has de­nied any cur­rent busi­ness ties. Both AR Hold­ings and Cum­mings and As­so­ciates Lim­it­ed are reg­is­tered at the same ad­dress—Unit 2, Metro Build­ing, Noel Street, Cou­va. AR Hold­ings re­ceived five con­tract ex­ten­sions worth over $116,000.

Sure Serv Lim­it­ed, reg­is­tered at the Metro Ho­tel in Cou­va, lists Ruth Cum­mings (for­mer­ly Ruth Walk­er) and Gail Je­re­mi­ah as di­rec­tors. The com­pa­ny was award­ed three con­tracts val­ued at $236,114, in­clud­ing waste re­moval at Carlsen Field Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment and The Vil­lage Plaza at Cashew Gar­dens.

Re­spond­ing to al­le­ga­tions of as­so­ci­a­tions, Fos­ter Cum­mings said: “I see here as well, or­di­nary cit­i­zens, or­di­nary busi­ness­men who have every right, as every cit­i­zen, to en­gage in busi­ness. Many of them I know.

“This is a small coun­try, and I come from a busi­ness back­ground. Busi­ness­men know each oth­er. Many of the names I was asked about yes­ter­day, I know all. I am fa­mil­iar with them. But I en­tered full-time pol­i­tics back in 2020, and mat­ters of busi­ness were left up to my fam­i­ly to man­age.”

HDC ex­ten­sions is­sued on Jan­u­ary 17

Rivulet In­vest­ment Group – $201,206.25 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Bulk Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Buen In­ten­to Phase I & Glen­roy Hous­ing De­vel­op­ments

Sure Serv Lim­it­ed – $200,812.50 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Bulk Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Union Hall Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment

Pi­cal Ser­vices Lim­it­ed – $203,175.00 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Bulk Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Roys­to­nia Hous­ing, Cou­va North De­vel­op­ment

Pi­cal Ser­vices Lim­it­ed – $209,160.00 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Bulk Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Lisa Gar­dens & Em­ba­cadare Hous­ing Es­tates De­vel­op­ment

Kly­don En­ter­pris­es Lim­it­ed – $206,325.00 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Bulk Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Pleas­antville Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment

Kly­don En­ter­pris­es Lim­it­ed – $203,962.50 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Bulk Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Cy­press Hills 1A, 1B & 1C Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment Phas­es One to Four

Costar Trans­port and Con­struc­tion Lim­it­ed – $190,575.00 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Bulk Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Oa­sis Greens Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment

Trinidad & To­ba­go Land­scap­ing Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed – $145,388.25 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Orop­une Gar­dens Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment

Trinidad & To­ba­go Land­scap­ing Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed – $132,995.25 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Oa­sis Greens Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment Phas­es 1–4

Pi­cal Ser­vices Lim­it­ed – $84,375.00 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Ed­in­burgh South Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment

Ge­lis­ter En­ter­pris­es Ltd – $83,603.25 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Green­vale Park Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment

Vir­go Con­sul­tants – $61,312.50 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Tarou­ba Heights Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment Phas­es 1 & 2 for the pe­ri­od Jan–Dec 2025

SMH Gen­er­al Con­struc­tion Ltd – $60,786.00 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Hu­bert­stown & Lake­view Hous­ing De­vel­op­ments

Lib­sco Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed – $59,625.00 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Cy­press Hills Phas­es 1A, 1B & 1C for the pe­ri­od Jan–Dec 2025

Main­stream Gen­er­al Con­tract­ing – $52,213.50 – The Ex­ten­sion of Month­ly Waste Dis­pos­al Ser­vices at Fair­field Hous­ing Es­tate Phas­es 1 & 2