Promise Kept in Mongouge — Now Take It to Every Corner of Choiseul-Saltibus
"I would not be a representative who only holds meetings when an election is around the corner."
Those were among the most powerful words coming out of the recent Constituency Town Hall Meeting at the Mongouge Community Centre.
For that promise alone, the Parliamentary Representative deserves recognition.
Too often in Caribbean politics, community meetings become seasonal events that magically appear a few months before an election. Residents are gathered, promises are made, photographs are taken, and then communities return to silence.
The recent meeting in Mongouge signalled a different approach.
According to the Representative's own report, residents received updates on constituency spending, infrastructure investments, drainage works, youth programmes, elderly support initiatives and plans for future development.
More importantly, residents were given an opportunity to ask questions directly and receive answers publicly.
Not rumours. Not Facebook debates. Not political whispers. Direct engagement between elected officials and the people they represent.
The Real Test Starts Now
However, while Mongouge deserves praise for hosting the first town hall, the real test begins now.
The challenge before the Representative is simple:
Can this model be replicated across every polling division?
Choiseul-Saltibus is much bigger than one community.
The concerns of Mongouge may not be the concerns of Piaye. The concerns of Piaye may not be the concerns of Roblot. The concerns of Saltibus may differ from those of La Fargue, Reunion, Industry, Victoria or Delcer.
Every community deserves an opportunity to sit across from its representative and discuss issues affecting daily life.
That is why Choiseul on the Move believes the Mongouge meeting should be viewed not as an event, but as the beginning of a constituency-wide engagement programme.
What We Recommended Months Ago
Following the General Elections, Choiseul on the Move published a recommendation entitled:
"Representation Must Be Built From the Ground Up."
The recommendation called for the establishment of active community groups across the constituency—small trusted teams of residents capable of maintaining direct contact with people on the ground.
These groups would become the constituency's eyes and ears.
- They know where elderly residents live alone.
- They know which families may need assistance.
- They know which drains need attention.
- They know where social problems are developing.
- They know where opportunities are being missed.
Without this grassroots layer, representation can easily become disconnected from reality.
One creates dialogue. The other maintains communication between meetings.
And What About Roblot?
As the Hurricane Season officially gets underway, another question deserves attention:
What role will the Roblot Community Centre play?
Community centres should not simply stand as buildings waiting for special occasions.
They should serve as centres of preparedness, training, community meetings, information sharing and emergency coordination.
With hurricane threats becoming increasingly unpredictable, every available community resource should be activated and placed into service.
Residents of Roblot and surrounding communities deserve to know what plans exist for the facility and how it can be utilised to strengthen disaster preparedness efforts.
Step Up Before the Storms Do
To his credit, the Parliamentary Representative has taken the first step.
He promised transparency. He promised accountability. He promised to return to the people outside of election season.
The Mongouge Town Hall suggests that promise is being honoured.
Now comes the opportunity to go even further.
Take the town halls to every polling division. Build active community groups. Strengthen communication networks. Activate community centres. Keep residents informed. Listen to concerns before they become frustrations.
It needs representation that listens every month, engages every community, and remains connected to the people long before and long after election day.
Mongouge was a good beginning.
Now let the conversation continue across the entire constituency.






