Wakanda News Details

Auction to get rid of over 700 wrecks at police graveyard in Cumuto - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

The graveyard for derelict police vehicles lies just before the Cumuto army barracks.

Here, a total of 461 wrecked police vehicles, mostly Mitsubishi Lancers and Suzuki Grand Vitaras, waiting to be processed for an auction that the police hope will take place in August.

Police vehicles – cars, buses, vans, trucks and motorcycles – many of them covered in mildew and with no wheels or doors – line a four-acre space carved from 100 acres of land given to the police by the state. Cars date back as far as the PBC series, which was the registration number for June 1997 to January 1998.

“Some of the vehicles are here because of road accidents and some are here because it is not economically feasible to fix them,” said Someet Ramroop, head, administration, of the Police Service. “The vehicles that are no longer roadworthy, or no longer economically feasible to repair, will be disposed of via auction.”

Ramroop said the plan is for the police to have “a centralised area to bring all marked and unmarked police vehicles to prevent the police compounds being filled with derelict or non-functional police vehicles that are an eyesore and pose health concerns. Any vehicles that are deemed worthy of being fixed will be prepared,” he says.

Two weeks ago, at the entrance of the lot, Cpl Mahmud Muhammed sat in his office with three desks, a kitchen and a dormitory constructed inside a container.

Three to four police officers have been working a shift (a total of nine-12 officers a week) to guard the vehicles since this section was commissioned nine months ago. Officers are pulled from nearby police stations to work shifts.

“The vehicles are safe and secure here,” said Muhammad.

A fence and gate, along with constant police presence, help to secure the premises.

Garvin Simon, the superintendent in charge of Police Transport and Telecom, is the police officer who decides which police vehicles can be repaired and which will be confined to the police car graveyard.

[caption id="attachment_891187" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Some of derelict police vehicles which are stored at Cumuto. - ROGER JACOB[/caption]

Walking through the site for an inspection two weeks ago, Simon said, “It might seem like a lot of vehicles are here, but the lifetime of a police vehicle is normally about three to five years. We don’t change our fleet as regularly as we should or as often as police do abroad. We just keep adding to older vehicles until they become unserviceable. We keep fixing vehicles until they can’t go anymore.”

Simon says most of the vehicles at the Cumuto site got to a point where parts were too expensive or no longer available. Some vehicles look good but engine problems became the issue.

“About 15 per cent of the vehicles here were written off in accidents,” says Simon.

The process of preparing for the police auction involves the police compiling a list for disposal, including registration number, chassis and engine numbers of each ve

You may also like

More from Home - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Literature Facts

Dr. Martin Luther King Biography for Kids

Malcolm X Speaks on History of Politics in the U.S.

Black Sands: Legends of Kemet Alpha Footage

The Green Book Pt I