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Former Member
Amaila Falls road project should be halted, re-examined — Ramjattan
By STABROEK STAFF | LOCAL | MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2011

In light of recent revelations that external consultants have found that the original specifications for the Amaila Falls access road were poorly designed, AFC presidential candidate Khemraj Ramjattan has called for the project to be immediately halted and re-examined. “There must be an immediate halt and a total re-examination of the whole project,” Ramjattan told Stabroek News recently, adding that it is clear from the consultants’ report that the project could have fundamental flaws. He said in re-examining the project, the specifications and the alignment of the road should all be looked at. By stopping the road now, it may save money in the long run rather than having to invest more to repair it six months after it would have been completed. “But they [the government] won’t do that,” Ramjattan said, saying that the administration was more interested in “gravy trains.” “That’s why they don’t care about design, quality surveys, and specifications,” he added.

In June, the developer for the Amaila hydropower project Sithe Global commissioned BBFL Caribbean Ltd in collaboration with Earth Investigation Systems Ltd to review the Amaila Access Roads project. The consultants in their report noted that the specifications in the original project document were designed poorly and recommended immediate changes to the design including widening the road and reducing its steepness (grades). The original specifications for the project would have been in the project document which was produced by National Industrial & Commercial Investments Ltd (NICIL). Government officials are yet to respond to queries from this newspaper on the report.

However, sources have indicated that the road contractor Fip Motilall has already began corrective measures to the road. The travel-way of the road is currently being widened from 5 metres, as originally designed to 7 metres. This is to accommodate the flow of two-way traffic on the road. Harping on the issue of corruption, Ramjattan said that the disclosure in the report is a “vindication of the plunder and corruption we are seeing all about the place.” He said that it is indicative of the government’s intention to do whatever it wanted against expert advice. Ramjattan pointed to the government’s US$200M investment in the Skeldon Sugar Factory, saying that the project decided to proceed with the project in spite of advice from reputable individuals. According to Ramjattan, an Indian company that used to provide spare parts to the various estates had advised the company to invest in a sugar factory rather than spend approximately $25M- $30M to rehabilitate all the other estates.

Ever since the award of the US$15.4M contract to Motilall’s Synergy Holdings, he has faced intense scrutiny over his road building capacity. Motilall says that he has built roads in the US States of Georgia and Florida. Motilall is currently way behind on his project but has been given an extension up to the end of the year due to a number of extenuating circumstances. The consultants, in their confidential report which this newspaper was able to peruse, noted that while the project contained good general guidelines the design specifications were poorly written and unclear in several cases. “The Information Memorandum is the only document received which indicates any level of project specification.

This document, while giving generally good guidelines for the construction of the work, lacks any specific guidelines for the proper design of the road,” the report stated. “Any given design specifications were poorly written, unclear and ambiguous,” it added. “No international design standards such as American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) or British Standards (BS) to be followed or referenced for the design of the road or bridges were stated in the Information Memorandum,” the report further stated.

Synergy’s contract is for “the upgrading of approximately 85 km of existing roadway, the design and construction of approximately 110 km of virgin roadway, the design and construction of two new pontoon crossings at the Essequibo and Kuribrong rivers.” The fourth part of the project is for the clearing of a pathway alongside the roadway to allow for the installation of approximately 65 km of transmission lines. Motilall was granted the construction notice to proceed on Sections 1 to 5 of the project on October 5 last year and the notice for Sections 6 and 7 in January and was expected to deliver on the initial contract by September 9.

Source

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What a feeble attempt to block progress in the nation. It was the same sentiment with the Bbice bridge and providence stadium. The same set of characters complaining. ahhahahahha
FM
quote:
Originally posted by BGurd_See:
What a feeble attempt to block progress in the nation. It was the same sentiment with the Bbice bridge and providence stadium. The same set of characters complaining. ahhahahahha
after the election we will find flip
W
The Auditor General should investigate payments under the Synergy contract
By STABROEK STAFF | LETTERS | TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2011

Dear Editor,

The government’s Request for Proposals in early 2010 for the building of the access road to the Amaila Falls hydropower dam site called for an all-weather road for heavy traffic; 85 km of road rehabilitation; 110 km of new road; the whole 195 km of road, 20 metres wide, surfaced with a white-sand-clay base 300 mm thick topped by 150 mm of laterite, the whole compacted to 95 proctor; HDPE culverts, bridges and river-crossing pontoons capable of bearing 100 tonne loads, 20 tonnes per axle; 65 km x 100 metres wide completely cleared right-of-way for the transmission line; all to be completed within eight months/240 days from contract effectiveness date.

At a news conference on March 23, 2011, the CEO of Synergy Holdings Inc said that “As I get done, I submit an invoice, Ministry of Public Works approves it, [and it] goes to the Ministry of Finance. I get paid” (‘Weather stalling Amaila Falls road – Motilall’ SN, March 23). I queried such payment in my letter published by KN on March 24 (‘The road to Amaila Falls – trick or treat?’). So, if I understand correctly, Synergy Holdings Inc is being paid as if it were completing the road to full specification while it is actually only building a track suitable for 4WD access.

Editor, could you ask the payment office of the Ministry of Finance, to clarify the story? No response has been published yet from the Ministry of Finance. This is NICIL money, so derived ultimately from Guyana‘s taxpayers, not Norwegian taxpayers or Chinese bankers. My query was published by SN on May 6 (‘Gov’t had tendered for an all-weather road to Amaila not a muddy track’), but we have had no response from the Ministry of Finance.

Now we have confirmation from technical advisor Walter Willis (Ministry of Transport and Hydraulics) that the construction by Synergy has been to 5 metres, later 7 metres, of travel-way width, when 5 metres would not have been sufficient for 100-tonne loads and safe vehicle passing. And Synergy has only completed 40 per cent of its contract ( ‘US$15.4M Amaila Falls project… Deadline extended to yearend,’ KN, September 17). If Mr Motilall’s claim about payment was true, he would have been paid 40 per cent of the US$15.4 million total contract (= US$6.2 million) but apparently only US$2.9 million has been paid.

There is a strong smell about this entire construction project, from the extraordinary award of the contract to an entity apparently with no relevant qualifications or experience in road building, no capital and no equipment, onwards through the construction phase. Editor, it is time for the Auditor General to conduct a thorough investigation and issue a full report.

Yours faithfully,
Janette Bulkan

Stabroek News

Kaieteur News
FM
quote:
Originally posted by Gerhard Ramsaroop:
The Auditor General should investigate payments under the Synergy contract
By STABROEK STAFF | LETTERS | TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2011

Dear Editor,

The government’s Request for Proposals in early 2010 for the building of the access road to the Amaila Falls hydropower dam site called for an all-weather road for heavy traffic; 85 km of road rehabilitation; 110 km of new road; the whole 195 km of road, 20 metres wide, surfaced with a white-sand-clay base 300 mm thick topped by 150 mm of laterite, the whole compacted to 95 proctor; HDPE culverts, bridges and river-crossing pontoons capable of bearing 100 tonne loads, 20 tonnes per axle; 65 km x 100 metres wide completely cleared right-of-way for the transmission line; all to be completed within eight months/240 days from contract effectiveness date.

At a news conference on March 23, 2011, the CEO of Synergy Holdings Inc said that “As I get done, I submit an invoice, Ministry of Public Works approves it, [and it] goes to the Ministry of Finance. I get paid” (‘Weather stalling Amaila Falls road – Motilall’ SN, March 23). I queried such payment in my letter published by KN on March 24 (‘The road to Amaila Falls – trick or treat?’). So, if I understand correctly, Synergy Holdings Inc is being paid as if it were completing the road to full specification while it is actually only building a track suitable for 4WD access.

Editor, could you ask the payment office of the Ministry of Finance, to clarify the story? No response has been published yet from the Ministry of Finance. This is NICIL money, so derived ultimately from Guyana‘s taxpayers, not Norwegian taxpayers or Chinese bankers. My query was published by SN on May 6 (‘Gov’t had tendered for an all-weather road to Amaila not a muddy track’), but we have had no response from the Ministry of Finance.

Now we have confirmation from technical advisor Walter Willis (Ministry of Transport and Hydraulics) that the construction by Synergy has been to 5 metres, later 7 metres, of travel-way width, when 5 metres would not have been sufficient for 100-tonne loads and safe vehicle passing. And Synergy has only completed 40 per cent of its contract ( ‘US$15.4M Amaila Falls project… Deadline extended to yearend,’ KN, September 17). If Mr Motilall’s claim about payment was true, he would have been paid 40 per cent of the US$15.4 million total contract (= US$6.2 million) but apparently only US$2.9 million has been paid.

There is a strong smell about this entire construction project, from the extraordinary award of the contract to an entity apparently with no relevant qualifications or experience in road building, no capital and no equipment, onwards through the construction phase. Editor, it is time for the Auditor General to conduct a thorough investigation and issue a full report.
Yours faithfully,
Janette Bulkan

Stabroek News

Kaieteur News

Janette, you are being way too kind . . .

This monstrous THEFT of taxpayers money is so shameful, barefaced and unprecedented in its DISRESPECT for the intelligence of the Guyanese people that one must concede FAILED STATE STATUS for my birth country.

Governance and allied institutions under Jagdeo are a CRIMINALIZED, SICK JOKE !!
FM
quote:

There is a strong smell about this entire construction project, from the extraordinary award of the contract to an entity apparently with no relevant qualifications or experience in road building, no capital and no equipment, onwards through the construction phase.


Janette Bulkan
The Auditor General should investigate payments under the Synergy contract
By STABROEK STAFF | LETTERS | TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2011

Stabroek News


Janette Bulkan, stick to solid facts and information rather than your continued assumptions, "smell", etc.
FM

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