Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Send in the engineers

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6 comments:

Anonymous said...

I am mortified by the way some areas are left to flood, either by badly designed, then built, bridges or rubbish in the culverts. |It doesn't take a nobel prize winner to see that if enough money was given to ensure that roads, culverts, bridges and flat lands were improved to minimise flooding, peoples lives would be much improved. Stop the nonsense of employing corrupt engineers etc and employ proper proffessionals to do the job properly that is proffessionally. people should be employed on a rolling programme so that at all times the island was kept up to a good enough standard

NUFF,SLP LOVE. said...

send in the engineers you say?

where will you find them?

we were very lucky to have 11 OF THEM,
now we only remain 9?????

PLUTOCRATS RAPACIOUS GOVERNMENT MINISTERS
ARE ALL ENGIN----GOING BY THE REAR/RECEDING.

NUFF,SLP LOVE. said...

send in the engineers you say?

where will you find them?

we were very lucky to have 11 OF THEM,
now we only remain 9?????

PLUTOCRATS RAPACIOUS GOVERNMENT MINISTERS
ARE ALL ENGIN----GOING BY THE REAR/RECEDING.

Anonymous said...

Build proper bridges in he country, stop that culvert nonesense. Where in the world people put three or four culverts close to each other, pack the top with dirt put asphalt over it and call it a bridge? Oviously when debris like trees come down the river they go across the culverts and knock them out. Example look at the Choc bridge, it was just washed away. Water would pass under a proper bridge.

Anonymous said...

Build proper bridges in he country, stop that culvert nonesense. Where in the world people put three or four culverts close to each other, pack the top with dirt put asphalt over it and call it a bridge? Oviously when debris like trees come down the river they go across the culverts and knock them out. Example look at the Choc bridge, it was just washed away. Water would pass under a proper bridge.

Anonymous said...

We have have to stop that backward pratice of lining up a few culvert together side by side, backing filling it with dirt and putting some alphalt on it and call it a bridge. And any tiime we have a big storn the debrey come down the river, it just wash away these so called bridges, because there is not a free way for it to pass under the bridge. Is that the only way we can design a bridge(I meant crossings because these are not bridges) in St Lucia? This is only wasting money, because after each storm another bridge has to be constructed.