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CVM News roundup: fatal crashes, family violence, water works and JPS scrutiny

20 min readManchester
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Several major public-safety, infrastructure and business stories led CVM’s June 13 newscast, including a fatal pedestrian crash on Main Street in Ocho Rios, a deadly family dispute in St. Elizabeth, a police shooting in Clarendon and renewed scrutiny of Jamaica Public Service after an islandwide blackout.

In St. Ann, 65-year-old Claudet Thorp of Petersfield district, St. Mary, died after a white Toyota Mark X reportedly left the roadway near the Ocho Rios market, mounted the sidewalk and struck her before hitting a utility pole. Police identified the driver as 27-year-old Rodney Thompson of a Port Maria address and said he was later handed over by relatives.

Police also arrested a 19-year-old accused of chopping two brothers and their mother at a home in Stevenson Town, Seaview, south-eastern St. Elizabeth. Travis Williams, a labourer from the community, died at the scene. His 14-year-old brother and 43-year-old mother were admitted to hospital in serious condition.

In Clarendon, 23-year-old O’Neal Hamilton, also called “J”, of Oliver Gardens in May Pen, was fatally shot after police said an Area 3 anti-fugitive team came under fire in Farm Effortville. A policeman was treated after a bullet struck his protective vest. Investigators linked Hamilton to crimes in Area 3, including a Friday bar robbery on Seawill Crescent in May Pen.

Road users in Montego Bay were warned about a collapsed section of the Ironshore to Norwood bypass near Norwood Meadows, while St. Thomas councillor Disdale Smith urged the Ministry of Education to repair Arcadia Primary School after it failed inspection as a hurricane shelter.

Water Minister Matthew Samuda said Manchester’s long-running supply problems should ease as major works advance, including the Hopeton-to-Waltham pipeline, the Pepper-to-Gutters connection and Caribbean Development Bank-funded rural upgrades. Energy Minister Daryl Vaz said the cause of the JPS grid collapse had not been confirmed and signalled that the utility’s 2027 licence renewal could face major changes or alternatives.

The bulletin also reported that diaspora couple Maria Dylan Brown and Frank Brown donated about $1.5 million in solar lights and poles to Middlesex district, St. Catherine. In business, the International Finance Corporation announced up to US$15 million for the Caribbean Community Resilience Fund debt sub-fund managed by Sygnus, aimed at financing resilient Caribbean businesses.

Syndicated from CVM TV News (Video) · originally published .

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