(October) For about the last
two weeks, there has been an unusually large amount of traffic on the
little village road that passes through the mission. The government is
having work done on the main road. They sent a track-hoe (big backhoe)
and at least 7 dump trucks to start moving rock and dirt from the area
down by the river up to the main road. After they finished all the
"good rock and dirt" there, they asked to take some off the mission
property. They received a very firm "NO." The area they wanted to dig
up is right over the hydro-electric intake pipes. It would have been a
disaster for the mission's electrical system. So they found the dirt on
the other side of the river to be very good, and they moved their
digging just up the mountain on the other side of the river from the
hydro-intake. We hope that nothing washes down and damages the system.
From
early morning to late in the night the trucks would move up and down
the road. The dust became unbearable. We tried to keep at least part
of the road watered to reduce the dust here, but many others were
suffering from the constant thick clouds of dust. It was several inches
deep along the road. It was so bad that Janet was standing on one side
of the road talking to Yona who was on the other. The truck came
through and she could not see him at ALL! Janet worked diligently to
try to get the trucks, the construction crew and government to work
together to reduce the dust. Some of us were starting to get sick from
it. They started watering the road some with their big water truck (a
few times.) We were so thankful! Then, thankfully the rains have
started, also.
In their digging by the river (the first pit)
they dug very deep and all the way up to the road!
This of course was
setting up the village to loose their road when the rains begin. After
MUCH communication with the village executive, district commissioner and
the construction people some work began to move the remaining dirt to
try to fill the big hole by the road. The night we heard the backhoe
leaving from on the mountain, Janet went to see if the hole by the river
had been filled. It had not been filled. She spent almost two hours
there with the workers and the village executive. The hole did indeed get filled mostly because of her insistence.
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