I have been repeatedly pressed to declare how well our Prime Minister performed during tropical storm Dorian.  No matter how many times I have responded, the requests keep coming.  To avoid further requests for a comment, my full response follows.

As the storm approached, our Prime Minister: explained the situation, encouraged people to prepare, closed businesses at a reasonably time, attended drainage clearing sites to verify that the work was being done, and did other similarly important things.

Our Prime Minister appeared to do these things in a calm and decisive manner.  She appeared to competently manage the protocols for a tropical storm.  All Barbadians should feel justifiably proud of our Prime Minister’s heroic performance.  So well done Madam Prime Minister.

What needs to be emphasised, is that our Prime Minister’s actions were appropriate for a tropical storm that should do minor damage.  Had we experienced Hurricane Dorian like the Bahamas, then no one, except the most extreme partisan supporters, would be praising Prime Minister (PM) Mottley’s efforts.

Our homes should be our primary shelters.  If the house is not sufficiently strong, then the occupants should move to a stronger shelter.  In 1993, under PM Sandiford, Barbados finally had a building code to inform homeowners and their contractors how to build strong houses.  It was a very easy-to-understand document, and added little to no additional construction cost.

PM Arthur won the general election in 1994.   In 1995, banks in Barbados started offering 100% mortgages, which started a massive residential building boom.  Fortuitously, Barbados had a new Building Code at the right time.  Regrettably, PM Arthur, who was responsible for Town and Country Planning, did not enforce or actively encourage the Code’s use during his 14-year term.

Part of PM Arthur’s real legacy, is the thousands of unnecessarily sub-standard houses that were built during his administration.  PM Stuart continued PM Arthur’s legacy of overseeing the construction of substandard houses, by not enforcing the Building Code.  However, he unpredictably went a lot further – in the wrong direction.

PM Stuart claimed to be flabbergasted at the fragility of houses in Barbados, after the damage done by Tropical Storm Tomas in 2010.  However, even that did not convince him to actively encourage the use of our Building Code.  Instead, his administration abolished it.  Thus, Barbados, in one of the most hazard prone regions on this planet, became the only nation on Earth to offer no meaningful structural building guidance to its residents.

PM Mottley inherited this unfortunate mess, and seemed well prepared to solve it.  She experienced the devastation caused by Hurricane Gilbert in Jamaica in 1988.  She was aware of the two Category 5 Hurricanes that caused major damage to our Caribbean neighbours in 2017.  Following the General Election in 2018, she declared that Hurricanes were one of the two things she fared most.

We seemed to be in good hands – PM Mottley would play the hero.  She would make building strong and durable houses a priority.  Tragically, she has embraced the damaging legacy of PM Stuart.  This should all but ensure that we will suffer a worse fate than those in other islands, if we experience a similar hurricane.  Why someone, who held such promise, chose such an irresponsible path, is a question that only she can answer.

Our PM still has time to play the hero by doing three simple, but highly effective things.  They will cost her administration no money and very little effort.  First, she should temporarily unabolish the 1993 Barbados National Building Code, for use in the residential construction sector only.  We should never abolish something unless we can replace it with something better.

Second, the 1993 Building Code should be published on the Internet and made freely available to residents.  Third, the Town Planning department should add the following standard condition of approval for residential applications.  “Construction should comply with the structural requirements of the 1993 edition of the Barbados National Building Code”.

Grenville Phillips II is a Chartered Structural Engineer and President of Solutions Barbados.  He can be reached at NextParty246@gmail.com

173 responses to “The Grenville Phillips Column – Hero or Villain”


  1. well put together article but it doesnt exactly track. MAM is being praised for her leadership in the face of tropical storm Dorian (and rightfully so) but if it had been a hurricane she would not have?

    man come, Grenville? becos she hasnt seen fit to enforce the building code? man houses built to code get damaged during a hurricane and those board houses we have in Bim will be ripped apart by a good storm. hardly her fault.

    yet she may not have re instituted the building code but how can you blame her for the failure of Arthur, Thompson and Stuart?

    i will say she performed admirably as these sort of events are her forte.

    and yes if she continues to ignore the fact that we need a building code in Bim but man what you have written is a stretch


  2. Would have been more “politically” effective if you had started out with your housing code and finish it with something like

    Although I think PM was effective in preparing the island for the storm, she would be even more effective, for future storm. if she would reestablished (my) housing codes which would add a necessary layer of protection for future and stronger storms and should be the forefront of any (storm/hurricane) preparations.


  3. The question we have to ask is do we need a building code. Is our housing stock compliant with a minimum standard. Is it possible to remove the politics from anything we have to do?


  4. We don’t NEED a building code. It would be wise if we had a building code.

    Did GP2 write the article as a private citizen or as a politician(SB)? The answer will determine if we can leave out the politics.


  5. Does it matter?


  6. You prepare for a tropical storm by buying additional food and water. If you do not adequately prepare, then you and your family will be inconvenienced for a few days.

    You prepare for a Category 5 hurricane (the new normal in the Caribbean since 2017) by building well. If you build badly, then you have already condemned your family to utter misery – and that is not a stretch.

    It costs the same to build well as it does to build badly. Actually, it is cheaper to build to the Building Code’s standards than how houses have been built for the past 24 years since the building code was published.

    You do not need any additional concrete blocks, concrete, etc to build well, you just need to assemble them properly. The knowledge to assemble them properly is in the 1993 Building Code, which our politicians discouraged (by wrongly calling it a draft) and then abolished. So people built with no guidance – and built badly, through no fault of their own.

    Since it was the government’s gross negligence that resulted in houses being substandard, then who should be blamed for the foreseen damage? If people choose not to use the Building Code, then the people will have no excuse – they will only have themselves to blame. Currently, PMs Arthur, Stuart, and now Mottley must take all of the blame for the foreseen horrific damage.

    Fortunately, these substandard houses can be economically strengthened. Since the Government irresponsibly facilitated sub-standard construction over the past 24 years, the Government should pay for the strengthening.


  7. Grenville

    It is referred to as draft because it is not law, correct?


  8. Building code don’t make me laugh when we can’t even enforce the movement of a bunch of squatters!


  9. Since the Government irresponsibly facilitated sub-standard construction over the past 24 years, the Government should pay for the strengthening.

    And where is the government going to get this money from?
    Raise taxes on the people?
    Raise taxes on businesses? – will pass it on to the consumers


  10. Once again the collective stupidity and total irresponsibility of the decadent Duopoly has been exposed.

    The Duopoly Rules


  11. Noone can predict how a depression will or will not intensify but we do have years of experience on which to rely.

    The natural motion due to the Coriolis Effect is North.

    Basic principle.

    In the absence of High Pressure areas to the north, a system will track north.

    The worst winds are in northern sector of the system.

    Normally, we will get off even if the system has intensified into a storm.

    However, systems do go south sometimes and we are exposed to the northern sector where the winds are most intense.

    Our location provides us with another advantage.

    Systems more than likely will form close to us and will not intensify to intense hurricanes.

    BUT, not always!!

    Our worst case situation is when a system intensifies into a hurricane far to the east of us with enough time to intensify

    AND

    the system forms in the latitudes from 8 to 11.25 degrees north.

    Building codes are important because we cannot predict if a system will form to the south of us AND if it will intensify to a hurricane AND if it will go south.

    But, most times we will get off … God is a Bajan if you like!!

    Just how He made the world!!

    Janet passed us to the south.

    Its hurricane winds extended a couple of miles inland.

    Loss of life from Janet (35) could have been minimized if buildings had been stronger AND people in the south had moved a couple of miles north AND there had been good advance warning as there is today.

    A more serious hurricane than Janet at our doorstep will however take no prisoners, 1780 (4000+ dead) and 1831 (1000+ dead) are examples!!

    Buildings can be replaced, life can’t.

    The Bahamas were recently hammered by a CAT 5 Hurricane, Dorian.

    There was loss of life, (5 so far)..

    No amount of building codes could have stopped it BUT in the absence of building codes AND in the absence of advance warning loss of life could have been catastrophic … like the loss of infrastructure.

    Dorian also passed us, but as a storm and slightly north.

    While I can’t argue against erring on the side of caution, sometimes it can be mistaken as a cry of wolf.

    … and then we have a problem.


  12. The Caribbean is the most endangered region in the world. There is a good reason why that region is made up of micro dots of pin-pointed islands. Bahamas is as flat as a pancake whilst Barbados is relatively flat. A combination of rising sea levels and the movement of mother earth will in time consume the Bahamas. And as for Barbados – it will run out of luck sooner or later.

    I understand that the Bahamas has a high standard for her building codes. Sadly, Barbadians are a complacent bunch. Our geographical location has meant that we have always avoided the worst excesses of tropical storms and hurricanes. This has served as our building code over the years; allied with our faith in God.


  13. Congratulations to Grenville for another great contribution to this blog.

    Given the dearth of technical expertise in the region, even among the elites, it is hardly surprising that Barbados operates without a mandatory building code. Our system of democracy aggravates the situation, because the wrong kinds of people hold ultimate power

    Perhaps Grenville can tell us why insurance companies have not stepped into the breach to enforce appropriate standards. Don’t they face catastrophic losses if Nature turns against us?


  14. @Ewart Archer
    September 4, 2019 4:07 AM

    …….Our system of democracy aggravates the situation, because the wrong kinds of people hold ultimate power..(Quote)

    Democracy, old boy, democracy. There is an old saying, youth s wasted on the young.


  15. The Caribbean is the most endangered region in the world.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    What about islands like the Dutch Islands, Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao?

    … and Trinidad and Tobago?

    We never hear of them being under the hammer of hurricanes.

    Ask google which islands in the Caribbean are not in the hurricane belt.

    You will be surprised to see Barbados is one!!

    That’s why Ross moved from Dominica … and why St. George’s University is in Grenada.


  16. @ John September 4, 2019 8:10 AM

    Master John, you should inform the BU ignoramuses why your god ‘created’ hurricanes.

    Is a hurricane one of your Yahweh’s method of punishing wicked people like he did in the story of Noah and the flood?

    What ‘go(o)d’ role do these monsters serve; whether hurricane or cyclone?

    Like Robert Lucas (PhD) you (the jack of all disciplines) must have done ‘A’ level Geography while at HC.


  17. You may find this information interesting.

    https://www.oas.org/cdmp/document/toolkit/toolkit.htm

  18. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ Miller at 8 :41 AM

    Do you not think that the question should be more appropriately directed at your Sun god rather than Yahweh?

  19. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    Building codes are merely guidelines aimed at construction of buildings to withstand hurricane force winds to a certain limit. There is no such thing called a hurricane proof building. So building codes give a certain level of comfort. Buildings built to these codes also suffer damages even in categories below their specifications. So yes it is good to take known precautions but there are no guarantees.

    In science,even the so called hard sciences,we deal in probabilities,not certainties. These are facts of life.

  20. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ Hants at 9 : 07 AM

    In one of my manifestations as a researcher , I would have loved to have you as a research assistant. I could not help but notice the taxes charged and collected for room and food. I wonder if these taxes reached the Treasury.

  21. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ John at 12:30 AM

    An excellent summation of the reasons that give credence to the adage that “God is a Bajan”. Location. Location. Location. Your Geography teacher would be proud of you.


  22. e

    Miller
    September 4, 2019 8:41 AM

    @ John September 4, 2019 8:10 AM
    Master John, you should inform the BU ignoramuses why your god ‘created’ hurricanes.
    Is a hurricane one of your Yahweh’s method of punishing wicked people like he did in the story of Noah and the flood?
    What ‘go(o)d’ role do these monsters serve; whether hurricane or cyclone?
    Like Robert Lucas (PhD) you (the jack of all disciplines) must have done ‘A’ level Geography while at HC.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++

    I figured this would get you going ….

    … and .. actually no, stopped Geography in 2nd form with Lady Adams.

    Isn’t God’s creation wonderful?


  23. Hal Austin

    I’m sure you learned along the way (perhaps at the Daily Mail where they say you got most of your education) that there is a distinguished line of political thinkers (the college textbooks usually start with the Greek philosopher Plato) who regard democracy as a degenerate form of government.

    In other words, the criticism of democracy is not new, and not confined to inexperienced youth. (And I am neither young nor inexperienced.)


  24. @ Ewart Archer

    ‘They’ are wrong again. I got most of my education on the streets of the Ivy. Who was Plato? Did he play football for Brazil, or was that Socrates? By the way, what is preferable to democracy?


  25. @ Vincent Codrington September 4, 2019 9:29 AM
    “Do you not think that the question should be more appropriately directed at your Sun god rather than Yahweh?”
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    It depends! If I were living in the Southern Hemisphere I might just blame both Viracocha and ‘Pachamama’ for what can befall the so-called Gilbert & Ellice islands.

    Can you imagine a typhoon called ‘John’ clashing with the Bajan god called Yahweh?
    By Jove, Zeus would be most upset to see how far He has fallen from grace, with no thunderbolts to wreak vengeance on you ‘indecisively’ vacillating puny humans.

    Killer Moses was right for stealing monotheism from the Egyptians. At least John has something to ‘believe in’ even if in a ‘burning bush’.


  26. It is extremely unwise to downplay the importance of (mandatory) building codes, by referring to them as “mere guidelines.”

    Building codes are crucial for safety, quality and energy efficiency. Their value has been most clearly established in regions affected by earthquakes (such as the Caribbean), but they also make a big difference in hurricane zones.

    Haiti lost an estimated 150,000 lives in 2010 to the type of earthquake that claims only about a hundred lives in Japan, because of the rigorous Japanese building codes.

    In Florida, there is a statewide building code to protect against weaker hurricanes, and a stricter code for the Greater Miami Area in South Florida to protect against strong hurricanes. That is how smart people organize their affairs.

    In the Caribbean, we are much too careless about these things.


  27. Hants

    Ferdinand, Gabrielle and tropical depression in mid atlantic should not be a problem.

    The system coming off the African coast we got to watch.

    Probably get to us around mid month.

    Bad time.

    Looks a little far north and could keep going so we might get off.

    There will probably be more.


  28. Good


  29. Does anyone belive that the topsy in the ocean which now serves a purpose for dumping sewage in the sea could have withstand the forces of a cat 5 hurricane


  30. “A tropical wave is forecast to emerge later today over the far eastern tropical Atlantic west of Africa. Environmental conditions are forecast to become mostly conducive for development late this week, and this system has the potential to become a tropical depression over the weekend or early next week while it moves westward to west-northwestward.
    * Formation chance through 48 hours…low…near 0 percent.
    * Formation chance through 5 days…medium…60 percent. ”

    Next week we may have a depression.

    It will probably be half way here.

    It’s latitude will determine if it will get to us.

    No need to consider an Island wide shutdown ……YET!!

    Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.


  31. ……That is how smart people organize their affairs.
    In the Caribbean, we are much too careless about these things….(Quote)

    So Caribbean people are not smart?


  32. @ GP2,

    I have family who live in the Bahamas. This extraordinary video clip was taken from a house built on stilts at a height of fifthteen foot. This video could well have been taken from a boat. It is terrifying. The loss of live is going to be a horrendous.

    Is the Bahamas a viable country to live in or should it be abandoned and left in the hands of mother nature.

  33. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ Hal Austin

    @Ewart

    Caribbean people are smart. They do arrange their affairs according to the size of their incomes and their assessment of the probabilities of an event occurring or not.Many of these events are outliers for some Caribbean countries as pointed out by John in an earlier submission on this blog. There are thousands of people trying to own a house and who will put building codes and insurance very low on their to do list. We do live in the real world.


  34. Don’t know why we are even bothering to discuss the building code. Who will enforce it? Wait don’t tell me the TPC right. The same TPC that allowed hundreds of illegal houses to be erected by squatters all over the island or another TPC that wunna will form? I know let’s pass 30 new laws and give the TPC to work with surely that will help.

    For God sake wunna wake up and stop living in La La Land where sheep talk and cows fly!


  35. @Vincent

    This is where leadership plays an important part. The government has a responsibility to craft policies and laws to force people to protect themselves. Many of us can forgo the aesthetics and constructive functional dwellings. That house TLSN refereed is a case in point , it was built on stilts with water proof type windows, not sure type of roof but a good guess is that the rafters had straps and roof no shingles.


  36. Referencing Winston Churchill: Put two economists in a room, you will get at least two opinions.

    Sometimes three or more.


  37. In fact, Winston Churchill is famous for saying, “If you put two economists in a room, you
    get two opinions unless one of them is Lord Keynes, in which case you get three opinions.” (Quote)

    Get it right.

  38. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ John A

    At least you are living in the real world. We need to build into our interventions a measure of reality including what is actually happening on the ground.

    @ David BU

    The citizens of this country are not in a Kindergarten class in a school. And the Authorities are not the school mistresses. At this stage of our political development we do not need that method of governance. In a democracy they do have choices to exercise according to their abilities. One cannot make bricks without straw. There is the constraint of the where- with – all. We need to be practical.

    I was responding specifically to points in the interventions referenced, not to TLSN’s. You are over stressing this ideology of leadership. Barbados always had leadership and WE STILL DO.


  39. Hal Austin

    Let me break it down for you.

    “Referencing” can mean “taking inspiration from”, “extrapolating from”, “building on the original idea or statement of”.

    This meaning is most commonly found in literary and film criticism, but is not restricted to those domains. For example, a film sequence may reference the presentation style of a distinctive and often-imitated director, like Jean-Luc Godard, Francois Truffaut or Michaelangelo Antonioni.


  40. Who are those French names? Are they truffles? Is literary and film criticism political science too? Don’t be impatient, young man. You will grow up in time. Stop trying to be impertinent and learn something. We were all young once..


  41. Clumsy.

    And Antonioni is Italian.


  42. And there I was thinking it was a spaghetti Bolognese. Young man, plse take it from me and cool down. There are people on BU more educated than you would ever be. I come here to learn. Humility is a good virtue. Keep your education, intelligence and qualifications under wraps. Don’t be in a rush to grow up.


  43. Mariposa
    September 4, 2019 12:45 PM

    Does anyone belive that the topsy in the ocean which now serves a purpose for dumping sewage in the sea could have withstand the forces of a cat 5 hurricane

    +++++++++++++++++++++++

    While anything is possible it is unlikely we will get a CAT 5 hurricane.

    Doesn’t mean a far weaker one could not reak havoc!!


  44. Hal Austin

    You should take your own advice and stop presuming I, or anyone else, needs it.


  45. Getting back to the original theme ie: performance on the job…………. we have become so accustomed to ‘bare minimum service with a scowl’ that when someone (even a PM) carries our their job as expected, we are amazed and begin heaping praise.

  46. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    @David September 3, 2019 9:08 PM “The question we have to ask is do we need a building code. Is our housing stock compliant with a minimum standard.”

    Yes David. We do NEED a building code. Only a fool would think otherwise, and I know that you are no fool.

    How can we know whether our housing stock is compliant with a minimum standards, if we don’t know what those standards are.

    My grandmother lost her father to the hurricane of 1998. I seem to be the only one on this blog who has lost a relative to a hurricane. His 38 year old widow was left with 14 children. including my 12 year old grandmother. Imagine the suffering. My grandmother could never forget, my mother experienced her mother’s suffering, and passed it on to us.

    I did not vote for Solutions Barbados. I don’t hold that party in high regard. But on the need for a building code, and very strict ENFORCEMENT, Grenville is right.

  47. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    1898.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading