Land realignment needed in West Berbice villages for agri production

Dear Editor,

I refer to some villages on the West Coast of Berbice (WCB) where it can be truly said that  time stands still.

On the WCB there are some villages where the front lands  (residential areas) are privately owned and the agricultural lands (backdam lands) are state owned.

But there are  other villages where both front and agricultural lands are  freehold property.

I refer specifically to Mon Choisi (#3) Edderton(#4) and ZeeLust (#5) villages WCB which I know about for sure.

These villages, and their proprietors,  have an age old problem which needs to be urgently addressed.

Lands and Surveys records show that the  three aforementioned villages were first  surveyed in  the late 19th century with their lands being allotted to proprietors in plots with a north to south orientation.here were  some attempts at updating these surveys in the 1960s as per Land Registration activity ie: creating a register of owners.

But these regularization  attempts in the 1960s were to all intents and purposes halfhearted: they  never reached the point of  issuance of Transports Titles etc to those registered as owners.

In the 1970s and the 1980s a drainage and irrigation network to facilitate increased agricultural production was established in WCB with the channels running in a  north to south direction, same as the land holdings.

And herein lies the problem for these villages like Mon Choisi, Edderton et al.

Ideally Editor, the agricultural /backdam lands  of these villages should be situated at right angles to the D&I network so that a farmer can access irrigation supplies at  one end of his field and  discharge such supplies  at the  other end of the field (the drainage end) when supplies are no longer needed.

The point is that in the aforementioned  villages, the D&I infrastructure for increased agricultural production and poverty alleviation is in place,  but the villagers   are unable to access the network in  any way because their holdings run parallel to the channels and as is known parallel lines never meet.

The result is that people have arable freehold land that they cannot fully utilize; so there is poverty, socio- economic problems; urban drift and migration.

The solution of course is that 1: the agricultural lands in these villages should be surveyed/measured in their current north to south alignment to determine the acreages owned by each proprietor and then 2: these lands should be turned around ie: given an east to west alignment along the entire width of the village and then be returned to the proprietor in this new alignment with the necessary title.

This is absolutely necessary land reform and the MMA-ADA should be doing it.

Indeed the MMA-ADA has done such realignment of lands in other villages on the WCB where the land holdings and the D&I system were parallel to each other.

The better quality of life in these villages can be easily seen.

This is the 21st century and the MMA-ADA must do the necessary surveys and land realignment so that the people in these villages can get a shot at modernity.

Yours faithfully,

Clifford Stanley