Should Crooked Tree Lagoon Connect to New River?
According to George Tillett, the Chairman of Crooked Tree Village, flooding has become a more frequent issue in the community. He recalls that when he was growing up, the lagoon would flood about once every ten years. Now, he’s noticed it overflowing every four to five years. Tillett has proposed a solution that some might find unconventional: building a spillway from the lagoon to the New River to help mitigate the flooding.
George Tillett, Chairman, Crooked Tree
“You ask about long term solution, well I have made a proposal to the government, because the Crooked Tree Lagoon is a basin for all the water coming up from Cayo, Guatemala, Benque and the solution is, we did a fly over in the peek of the flooding season one year ago and we found out that the New River is below us. It is only like two miles away from our water body. So, my solution to them is if they would dig a channel, like an overspill, probably about four feet deep, twenty feet wide, all the way to New River, then our land, our roads, wouldn’t be flooded, because whenever it reaches a certain level it would empty out into the New River, which will alleviate our flooding and pump fresh waters into the stagnant waters of New River.”
Facebook Comments