Michael Lashley, Minister of Transport

Barbadians have been alarmed at the number of road fatalities for the year 2017. The 13 road fatalities have surpassed the total for all of 2016. Although official numbers are not available the number of vehicle smash-ups have also significantly increased.

Predictably Minster of Transport and Works Michael Lashley responded to the news of the latest fatality by promising to introduce new legislation by the legalizing breathalyser testing, introducing fines for texting while driving among other penalties.

Surely the minister and authorities should be able to discern that the rising number of road fatalities and vehicle smash-ups is a symptom of a societal malaise. We need relevant laws to ensure the authorities are equipped to make our roads safe to travel for Barbadians. To address the problem however requires a more cerebral approach.

The inability of successive governments for the last 40 years to effectively intervene in the transportation system to effect change does not inspire any confidence that Lashley will be the change agent needed to correct the bedlam on our roads. This is the same Lashley who was branded the ‘star boy’ of the administration pre 2013 for constructing a mobbaton of houses several which are unoccupied years later -some rotting. There is the questionable housing transaction at Coverley constructed by the omnipresent Mark Maloney –Mr.GROTTO.

This is the same Lashley who exercised poor judgement by leasing a luxury vehicle from Lloyd Bathwaite of Trans-Tech Inc, a company registered as a supplier of services to the Transport Board. In any enlightened society this would have been the type of transaction a politician and public official would be expected to declare to ensure transparency.

The lack of confidence in Michael Lashley can be explained by several other examples. For the BU household there is one at the top of the pile. In February this year the Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation (CBC)  cancelled a segment on the early morning show Mornin’ Barbados with President of the Barbados Road Safety Association (BRSA) Sharmane Roland-Bowen. All who monitor the media space will admit that Roland-Bowen has been one of the most vocal when it comes to road safety and traffic issues. Trying valiantly to educate the public about proper road use. Her one mistake was to embarrass the government at the height of the national concern about the alarming number of potholes on our roads when BRSA located flags next to the deeper potholes.

It makes one question which is more important –educating Barbadians on road safety issues or shoring up a sagging political image.

Is Minister of Transport and Works Michael Lashley aware of the embarrassment being experienced by the country to renew a driving license? Barbadians have given up and prefer to show proof of payment with a receipt instead of the picture ID. The licensing authority has been unable to consistently produce the driving license picture ID.  This is 2017 and for individuals to have to spend so much time to complete a simple driving license renewal does NOT inspire confidence Mr. Minister Michael Lashley.

Please stop your braying and fix the problems!

98 responses to “Braying Like Balaam’s Ass”

  1. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    Bushman….what is the speed limit in Bridgetown. ??

  2. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    Why I asked, many bus drivers, particularly transport board drivers, drive around the city like the speed limit is 60 or 70 mph…., they injure passengers when they take corners badly at those speeds and then insurance companues give hell to pay.


  3. ROAD TRAFFIC REGULATIONS,1984
    Part X
    Speed Limits
    87. (1) Subject to this paragraph, the maximum speed at which motor vehicles may be driven on any road ,is in the case of
    (a) Tractors ,with or without trailers,and the other motor vehicles drawing one trailer or more , 30 Kilometres per hour.

    (b) Motor omnibuses and vehicles licensed for a maximum gross weight exceeding 3 tonnes ,50 Kilometres per hour.

    (c)Minibuses , tour coaches, heavy goods vehicles,50 Kilometres per hour.

    (d) Other motor vehicles 60 Kilometres per hour.

    But the speed limits specified in the sub-paragraphs (a) to (c) may be reduced within areas and along roads as indicated by traffic signs.

    (2) Not withstanding anything to the contrary contained in tis Part, on roads on which it is so specified by traffic signs, the maximum speed at which a private motor car, light motor cycle,heavy motor cycle, hackney carriage or hired car may be driven is 80 Kilometers per hour.

    ps. Those container trucks we see zooming about Barbados with SL number plates, with or without trailers,laden or unladen come under a Special License (SL) regulation which limits the maximum speed to 15 MPH , (subject to correction. This is not quoted in the Road traffic Regulations, but on the Permit which is issued with the SL plates,and probably still calls for a person with a red flag to walk 200 feet in front of the Special License vehicle.

    The Barbados Government some years ago went to the trouble of compiling a Barbados Highway Code. It was poorly patronised by drivers in Barbados. And not many people in Barbados are aware that copies of the Barbados Road Traffic Act, and the Barbados Road Traffic Regulations are available from the Government Printery, the one in Bay Street.


  4. Bush Tea March 27, 2017 at 7:08 AM #

    The speed limit in New York City was reduced from 30 m.p.h to 25 m.p.h. by the current mayor. Speed cameras are all over the place and passing through a speed trap zone doing more the 10 m.p.h over the limit is a $50 dollar ticket.


  5. And this is the point. Do something in the mode of what Bush Tea posted above. Instead we have to read Attorney General being quoted in the newspaper that the high number of road fatalities is unusual and there is no need to panic, just an opportunity to educate.

    Someone should ask Brathwaite if he knows what tipping point means.

  6. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    Most of these transport board drivers zip through town at much more than 50 kilometers and injure passengers, if they drove at the 50 kilometer. ..31 mph speed limit, which is a decent speed, there would be no need for passengers to hold on tight with both legs and arms and fear for their lives……a bus ride should not be an exercise in fearing that you suffer life long injuries or die because the drivers cannot stop their reckless speeding…and then, if you survive, be subjected to a nonfunctional supreme court and uethical, lying insurance companies.

    As usual, there is no enforcement of regulation or cameras set up to catch these beasts for drivers who cause injury and death to passengers and others, they started having cameras on certain buses and as with everything else on the island…..they could not maintain the cameras, people suffer life long injuries because of these reckless transport board and minibus drivers.


  7. We do not want to be misunderstood -educating the ignorant is important BUT zero intolerance must be sent to the country at large there will be zero tolerance. Strong enforcement is necessary.

  8. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    https://www.barbadostoday.bb/2017/03/28/wrong-turn-5/

    The braying jackass Ariel Nitwit still dont understand that the zero tolerance concept means that once stricter laws and penalties are ENFORCED. ……the idiots on the roads will think twice about speeding recklessly…..in his backward little mind, doing nothing is better than doing something to stop death and injury to innocent people….this jackass of an attorney general openly and publicly condones and enables criminality.

    ” Wrong turn
    Brathwaite says tougher laws won’t prevent road deaths

    Added by Colville Mounsey on March 28, 2017.
    Saved under Local News
    4
    Attorney General Adriel Brathwaite has dismissed calls for tougher legislation to curb the number of fatal road accidents here, arguing that new laws would not stop road deaths.

    With Barbados recording an average of one death on the roads every six days, road safety advocates, including the Barbados Road Safety Association (BRSA), have been calling for stricter laws to improve safety.

    Among the demands by the BRSA are laws to introduce breathalyzer testing and tougher penalties for motorists responsible for road fatalities.

    “We have to make penalties a deterrent, set them high so they will deter persons in some cases . . . [or], start sending persons to prison because a fine, and especially a small fine, cannot replace the value on life,” BRSA President Sharmane Roland-Bowen said last November, in one of the many speeches she has made on the subject of road safety.”

  9. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    Another unbelievably uneducated statement from Adriel Nitwit Dimwit….your useless , retarded attorney general….who is telling him this crap…and why does he not know, why does he have to be told anything…..and everything.

    “This is unprecedented in the history of Barbados. I don’t believe that we have ever had so many road fatalities in such a short period of time. We must all be concerned because it not just a legislative issue because from what I am being told it is mostly recklessness,” the Attorney General said.”

  10. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    TRANSLATION….Adriel Nitwit Dimwit will do nothing to stop these injuries and deaths.

    That should be enough to ensure he is never a government minister again.


  11. @ David
    Seriously now….
    Do you consider it a “coincidence” that EACH and EVERY one of our leaders are led to say and do the most stupid and backwards things; to make the most retarded decisions; to wreck the economy with an unbelievable slide in international ratings; and to oversee unprecedented declines in forex, productivity, employment; social benefits etc ?????

    ….and that after all this carnage, they are still convinced that they are on the ‘right track’…?

    What more will it take you you people to see that this is a SPIRITUAL problem that we are facing, and that our very country and SOULS are in mortal danger?

    Shiite man!!!
    All of these political people have ‘degrees’ from Sir Cave…
    They are supposed to be among our best and brightest.
    How is it that even the half-drunk, unemployed, yardfowls outside the rum shops can see their nakedness…?

    This problem goes BEYOND the intellect of these politicians…… It goes to the fact that they are possessed with evil …. This is what Jones may have been alluding to some time ago…

    BTW….Have you listened to Jones speaking? ….REALLY listened?
    The man is in SERIOUS need of exorcism……

    When they were led to build that monument at the Garrison, with the Devil’s pitchfork emerging from the ground, it should have raised alarm bells…..

    When unexplainable smells and unrelenting chaos turned up at Combermere (where the creator of the ‘monument’ originated) we should have paid attention.

    Most importantly, when Bushie TOLD WUNNA that it was a lotta shiite….. people tek it for big joke…

    We have been delving so much into EVIL, …with institutionalised corruption, open stealing, bribery, murder, lack of justice, open dishonesty without ANY penalties….. that the Devil himself has accepted the invitation to set up shop here…

    From all appearances, he loves the place, …and plans to be around for a long time …making himself at home (converting Bim into Hell…)

    Expecting ‘solutions’ to come from the same corrupt, retarded, brass-bowl politicians who CREATED the problem in the first place is an exercise in spitting into the air….


  12. @Bush Tea

    Is it BU or should it be a concern we allow public officials to perform in roles for too long. It is never recommended for employees to do the same job for more than a period of 3 or 4 years? It is human nature for the focus to dim if we perform activities for an extended period.

    Jones does not enjoy the confidence of key stakeholders.

  13. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    I had the unfirtunate experience if discoursing wuth Jones on several occasions, it was nig pretty, I would nit want that experiencd again from sucha hardheaded jackass, Inniss, same thing, they never have the best interest of the people who voted them in as a priority….That was clear.

    Would definitely nit6 want the experience of talking to Fruendel, or Adriel Nitwit, or Estwick, definitely npt Mara or Blackett ……… spoke to Paul once, that was enough, since an english woman he was seeing, Marina, said she had to taught him hiw to hold eye contact with people, he did not know how to communicate, said she, she is known to embellish though, he knows that…….but nevertheless. .., they are all damaged and scarred goods, have no interpersonal relationship or communication skills, not suitable to be public servants….as is so very clear now.

  14. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    Forgot to edit.

    I had the unfprtunate experience of discoursing with Jones on several occasions, it was not pretty, I would not want that experienc again from such a hardheaded jackass, Inniss, same thing, they never have the best interest of the people who voted them in as a priority….That was clear.

    Would definitely not want the experience of talking to Fruendel, or Adriel Nitwit, or Estwick, definitely not Mara or Blackett ……… spoke to Paul once, that was enough, since an english woman he was seeing, Marina, said she had taught him how to hold eye contact with people…….

    Spoke to that donkey Liz Thompson once, what an experience.


  15. Message from the IRU.

    ” tougher laws won’t prevent road deaths “

  16. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    Sandra Husbands is more articulate……..but…

    Mia crawls my skin too much.

    An urgent overhaul of the politicial wannabes is needed.


  17. @Hants

    To wrestle a serious problem it will require a multi approach.

    #commonsense


  18. http://www.mto.gov.on.ca/english/dandv/driver/handbook/section2.10.1.shtml

    An immediate seven-day licence suspension and seven-day vehicle impoundment at roadside when a police officer has reasonable and probable grounds to believe the offence was committed

    If convicted:

    Fines from $2,000 to $10,000

    Courts can impose a driver licence suspension of up to 10 years for a second conviction within 10 years

    The accumulation of six demerit points, a maximum licence suspension of two years for a

    first conviction and a maximum six months in jail.


  19. @ David,

    IRU = Idiots R Us.

    How can an AG believe that penalties are not deterrents ?


  20. @Hants

    Good to listen to Peter Wickham given the president of the Barbados Road Safety Association a run on the talk show today.

    Good job!


  21. @ David
    Bushie has no idea of where that woman came from…. But she is like a cockroach at a “fowlcock” party among this DLP lot.

    The woman speaks with a clear common sense and logic that is beyond question.

    As Bushie said some time ago, she actually came up with the CORRECT answer to our traffic woes a while back, …and was laughed at by Bajans….. and this was WELL before the REAL shiite started hear…?
    She made a national call for prayers…..

    Like Caswell, this woman is like a breath of fresh air in a cesspool of idiocy and greed.


  22. David

    The BRSA is concentrating too much on alcohol and breathalyser test as Gibbs-Taitt pointed out to Peter he worked with accidents at District A and the causes were many and he recommended a holistic approach.


  23. @Vincent

    Here we go again,analysis paralysis. The lady was very clear to suggest we should focus on enforcing and implementing laws that deal with legal substances. She made several useful suggestions.

    Do you deny accidents happen because drivers are under the influence of alcohol? Let begin some flipping place!

  24. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    Spoke couple times with Arthur too, but he is too haughty and cant wait for you to turn ya back so he can stick a knife in it……with his tongue…..too smart for his own good until he meets people with big city experience a lot more brutal than he is…lol

  25. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    Saw some idiot last week in one of the online dailies challenging someone else to PROVE that drivers in Barbados drive under the influence…..he deserves a slap to wake him up…..you need breathalyzers to measure intoxication levels…..to save lives……ya past the point of proving anything.

  26. Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing BloggerI

    Adriel nitwit dimwit should open the prison and release all the inmates since legislation enforcement is not a deterrent. ..in his mind.


  27. By the 6th of April all of this hullabaloo about roads accidents will be forgotten, until there is another road fatality,unless ,God forbid , it occurs within this Bajan standard 9-day period of concern.


  28. A man once told me that he was able to drive better when he had a few drinks in ,than when he is sober. And that man who was a policeman then, overtook , one evening, a couple of cars in the middle of Oistin Hill.

  29. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Lol…Colonel, how did that bright idea by that drunk driver cop end.


  30. I worked in the ‘mainguard’ in the 60’s during Magistrate Perry’s time. We need another Perry in the Traffic Court, if they still have a traffic court.


  31. My car had a top speed of 230 kph when new. Can still do about 210 in its current state.

    i do not exceed 120 on the highways neither do I drive drunk because………

    ” licence suspension of two years for a

    first conviction and a maximum six months in jail.”

  32. Vincent Haynes Avatar

    David

    When are you and others understand that yesteryears drinking culture that I grew up in no longer exists,the in high has been illegal drugs for some time.

    Alcohol is a low hanging fruit so when it is picked,are they ready to deal with the cocaine and the latests ones?


  33. David,
    Don’t come to me with that foolishness. It took me two trips. On one day, I went to the Pine, left, when I saw the number of people ( I could have waited in the line until the people before me were served. ) and I left there’d went to the BRA office in the treasury building and got yore receipt, in ten minutes. I then, at my leisure went to the Pine in the picture taking section and got the photo taken in less than fifteen minutes, because there were only two people before me. If I were in Canada it would be the same thing, wait until other people; who are there before me are served. People have to learn tone patient. Anywhere you go there will be a line,supermarket, bank, store, wherever, Wait!!!

    Buggy; “…Some were there from as early as 6.30 am, and did not get away until after 3.PM”
    Bull! Those people have time to waste. A look at the Highway Traffic Act will show that it is only if you do not have the receipt showing that you have renewed the driver’s licence, accompanied by the expired one, that you will be reported. As long as you have both the policeman will not report you. He can only report you for driving with an expired licence, if you do not have the receipt.
    Gabriel, The “so called” East Coast Road, has always been the Ermie Bourne Highway. It is only that Bajans would not stick to whaT IT WAS NAMED. FROM THE BEGINNING. IT WAS NAMED AFTER MRS ERMIE BOURNE, WHO WAS A BUS OWNER FROM BELLE PLAIN.


  34. @Vincent

    Nonsense!

    The drinking culture is very prevalent. Added is the illegal substance abuse. Both exist.


  35. @Alvin

    OK Sir.


  36. We should also look at withdrawing the Liquor License of any rum shop or drinking establishment which serves alcohol to any individual who appear to have had his or her quota.


  37. Gabriel, The “so called” East Coast Road, has always been the Ermie Bourne Highway. It is only that Bajans would not stick to whaT IT WAS NAMED. FROM THE BEGINNING. IT WAS NAMED AFTER MRS ERMIE BOURNE, WHO WAS A BUS OWNER FROM BELLE PLAIN.
    ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
    There you go again. News to me that Ermie Bourne was a bus owner.


  38. ha,ha, ha. The bus owner from Belleplaine, St. Andrew was Mrs. Rock of Rocklyn bus line. Mrs. Bourne was from St. Andrew and was the first woman elected to the Barbados House of Assembly.

    hahahahahah. Alvin tink he no eva ting. hahahaha

  39. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Lol…oh ya noticed. ..the bus was even called Rocklyn, if my memory serves me, but Alvin might remember it as something else…lol


  40. @ bajans
    In all fairness, Alvin does not claim to know eva thing….
    His problem is much less sublime …MUCH, much less so…
    ha ha ha
    wuhloss


  41. Bajans.
    I stand corrected. It was indeed Mrs Rock who was owner of the Rocklyn bus company, in Belle Plain. One of those “Board and Shingle” busses, in the same colours, serves to conduct tourists on tours these days. Actually her gas station is still there, just around the corner, and the “East Coast”Road was indeed named after Mrs Bourne; First female representative to be elected to the house, and after whom the road was named. I stand corrected. I apologize, for my misspeak. I did get the name of the highway right though, didn’t I?
    I do not know everything and I do, and will, make mistakes from time to time. I seek to make things right, when I can.

    True dat Bushie.


  42. Good to see the police out in force on the highways today. We must have this on a consistent basis to force behaviour change though.

    Meanwhile in Dodge.

    https://www.facebook.com/david.lynch.98622/videos/1384590748275594/

    David Lynch
    23 hrs ·

    Bus to Bayfield, St. Philip this afternoon with a full bus load, cell phone texting still the most important thing. (B 185) Man’s a hard seed, he’s got 3 cells on his dashboard.


  43. another brassbowl idiot endangering the likes of others.


  44. I wondered how many of the passengers on that bus stop the bus and got of ,because of the potential to become involved in an accident, or how many spoke to the driver about his unsafe practice?
    Another Put-the- rotten- Corn- beef- back -on -the- shelf – mentality.


  45. The street lights on the spur section of the ABC Highway at Graeme Hall, will shortly be back in operation. But what have become of the millions of dollars worth of red and amber Cat’s Eyes, which the then Minister of Transport, John Boyce, had plastered the length and breadth of the ABC Highway. An excellent good idea , and a back up when street lights are not working, provide that they are maintained.
    Almost every Roundabout in Barbados has its own peculiar rules, and to some extent Traffic lights. Now we have seen this confusion , extended to stand-alone Pedestrian Crossing Lights.
    There are some in Oistin , which are on constant, Amber flashing mode. Then there is one on Martindales Road, outside of the QEH, and yet another on the Harbour Road, outside of the Fish Market, all operating differently. The latter being the most confusing of all . I cannot recall at anytime, hearing or seeing notification from the MTW/Police alerting / educating the traveling public on the operation of these pedestrian lights.
    No wonder that vehicular accidents are on the increase.


  46. If the bosses try to discipline him I am sure the unions will walk out on strike.


  47. @Alvin Cummins

    Have you read today’s press which highlights the lack of lighting on our major highways?

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