Cuba's daily challenge with trashed streets

In Cuban cities, the workday starts with mountains of garbage piled on corners, sidewalks, and yards, a sanitation issue that has become a constant in urban life. Deteriorated streets with deep potholes and stagnant puddles after rains breed mosquitoes and heighten public health risks. Irregular garbage collection and poor maintenance worsen this scenario, impacting residents' quality of life.

The scene repeats daily in Cuban cities: piles of solid waste, including torn bags, food scraps, discarded furniture, and dead animals, overwhelm public ways and erase any urban order. This landscape of decay no longer surprises but remains alarming, as Safie M. González describes in her diary for Havana Times.

Streets feature extensive cracks and impassable sections that force pedestrians and drivers to improvise routes. After every rainfall, uneven surfaces form puddles that linger for days, weeks, or months, breeding mosquitoes and raising disease risks. The lack of proper drainage and maintenance intensifies the public health impact.

Garbage buildup stems from multiple factors: irregular collection, scarce resources, broken equipment, and poor urban sanitation management. Residents live with contamination sources mere meters from their homes; children play near makeshift dumps, the elderly struggle on damaged sidewalks, and everyone navigates obstacles to reach destinations.

Beyond health effects, these unsanitary conditions erode quality of life and emotional well-being. Navigating the city demands constant alertness amid foul odors, flies, and dirty water, starkly contrasting Cuba's renowned natural beauty. Yet, individual acts of responsibility endure: neighbors sweeping in front of their houses, placing stones or boards to cross flooded streets, and community efforts to ease the issue. Still, such actions fall short; urgent attention, efficient planning, and institutional commitment are needed to address this ongoing reality and create safe, dignified, habitable spaces.

Makala yanayohusiana

Garbage accumulation in Matanzas, Cuba, has shifted from occasional to a permanent urban feature, worsened by a fuel crisis cutting waste collection frequency. Residents burn trash piles to fend off pests, producing toxic smoke. Violeta González, 75, collects aluminum cans from dumps daily to make ends meet.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Smoke from burning garbage piles has become part of the everyday landscape on nearly every street in Havana. Residents set them ablaze to fight pests like flies and mosquitoes, despite health risks. The cycle repeats without resolution.

A 1920s house at 157 8th Street between Calzada and Línea in Havana's Vedado teeters on the brink of collapse, sheltering four families amid severe deterioration. Once home to a wealthy family and subdivided after the 1959 Cuban Revolution, it features rusted rebar, widespread cracks, and unengineered lofts. Residents have repeatedly written to authorities, receiving no effective action.

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In the first days of March, Cuba experienced another nationwide power outage stretching from Camagüey to Pinar del Río. Residents like Nike, a seamstress from Havana, describe how these frequent cuts disrupt daily life, forcing the use of charcoal for cooking and reading books during the day. Despite the hardships, some find moments of family connection in the darkness.

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