Local September 4, 2020 - 9:54 am

Crews haul off over 5,000 tons of trash from the Ozama River

File.

Santo Domingo.- Crews from the Mayor’s Office of the National District, the Ministries of Public Works and Defense have removed more than 5,000 tons of flotsam piled up on the Ozama River floating bridge and in the southern coast of the Caribbean Sea since Tropical Storm Laura.

Most of the waste is snared at the floating bridge where the dredging department of the Navy works together with the Mayor’s Office removing decomposed plastic, lilacs and logs damming on the barges that form the bridge.

Backhoes fill dump trucks which haul the waste to the Duquesa landfill in Santo Domingo Norte.

“What we are trying is that that amount of plastic does not reach Montesinos and does not make the scandal with tourism that was made when the garbage reached the sea and, in addition, and avoid more problems with COVID,” said one of the supervisors of the operations

COVID-19

September 6, 2024 - 4:38 pm

Ministry of Health enhances plans for pandemic and respiratory epidemic response

September 6, 2024 - 2:36 pm

Abinader: Haiti crisis straining Dominican Republic’s migration, health, and education systems

September 1, 2024 - 8:00 am

Public Health assures there are no cases of monkeypox in the country

September 1, 2024 - 7:00 am

The country registers low incidence of respiratory viruses

MOST READ

Economy

Housing costs soar in the Dominican Republic

Local

Dominican government takes over traffic light network after three-day disruption in National District

Tourism

Brazilian tourist arrivals soar in Dominican Republic after visa elimination

Economy

Puerto Plata’s tourism rebounds

MORE NEWS

Local

Dominican Today journalist wins Pasaporte Abierto 2024 award, Dominican Republic receives multiple honors

Tourism

Project for sustainable sargassum management launched in the Dominican Republic

North Coast

Aerodom aims to bring the giant A380 to Puerto Plata

Local

What is now the Dominican Republic was home to the Samanese, the first humans to populate the Antilles nearly 5,500 years ago