Village Council Says no to Proposed Subdivision of Park in Orange Walk
A village council is putting its foot down in Orange Walk after the Lands Advisory Committee began taking steps to subdivide a nature park in the community. Earlier this month, the San Jose Nuevo Palmar Village council wrote to, Chairman of the Committee, Wincy Perez, strongly opposing the subdivision of the Siibal Yum Nature Park. In the letter, Village Chairman Orlando Ayuso explains that over twenty thousand dollars has been invested into the renovation of the park, which has become a popular spot for leisure and recreational activities in the community. We spoke with Ayuso today to hear why the council believes the park has become an integral part of the community.

Orlando Ayuso
Orlando Ayuso, Chairman, San Jose Nuevo Palmar
“The state of the park, right now’s a clean park, a usable space. If you go to our social media page, we just had a very successful Easter egg hunt. And when we came by asking for the vote for the second term, we promised the people in that area, you’re gonna have a park. We’re gonna clean this up. People will stop dumping garbage. You will stop smelling the stench of rotten carcasses because you used to dump dead dogs, dead chickens, people who are running poultry shops to dump the feathers and things over there. It was hard to monitor because of the lack of resources and finances. And as usual, I, as a chairperson, took the lead. Two of my members, my vice chairman and one of my counselors, went on to offer themselves for election for Lands Committee. And they won. They won because they’re very good leaders, so people look at them as somebody who could lead. And it just so happened that now they’re on that side that one of it’s not them that wanna subdivided. It’s a little group of people guiding them into subdividing this park. So that is how we arrive at where we are today, that day that the Palmar Village Council is asking the Lands Committee to not do that subdivision because it is already an established part. It’s a pity. It’s a pity because on that side of the village, these people haven’t gotten much, and this is the first meaningful thing that they’re getting from any group that has been governing the village and children are using that playground already. They go there to play, it’s a safe environment. In the afternoons, people go and walk around it and work out because most people work out on Boundary Road, which is a busy street. So it’s safer for them to go one street behind to the park. We know as Siibal Yum Nature Park and they some ride their bicycles around, some walk around. And we are trying to keep it natural because you wanna create a nature park. We’re planting more trees. We have put in a few park benches because it’s community-based, so people have been donating those benches were donated by villagers, not by any group specifically, but by villagers. So if this was to be taken away, then they’re taking away the only recreational area that side of the village has.”
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