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FM
Former Member

Airport extension and the Shah’s golden toilet

Stabroek News, Posted By Christopher Ram On June 30, 2013 In Features,Sunday |

 

Introduction

I wish to acknowledge the generosity of all those persons who have shared information and their time and expertise relevant to this column. They prefer anonymity, some because of fear of victimization. One non-Guyanese who lives abroad sent me a copy of the FIDIC Yellow Book referred to in the contract for the runway expansion which I earlier indicated I had some difficulty accessing. I am gratified and grateful too to the many engineers who have looked at the contract for the expansion of the runway and the construction of a new terminal building. This contract is a shocking tale of recklessness and irresponsibility on the part of the Ministry of Public Works and indeed the entire government which with its eyes open signed a contract that allows the contractor China Harbour Engineering Company Ltd of Beijing China to fleece this country.

A Guyanese engineer who practises his trade in the US and who reviewed the contract at my request described it as the most lopsided contract he had ever come across in his entire professional life. He was struck at the looseness of the language of the contract that allows the contractor easy escape from any liability and the disproportionate obligations which the government has assumed under the contract. Citing one specific example the engineer noted that the contractor can claim against the government that he needed to work 24 hours on any day but the government did not allow it, presumably by ceasing all activities and flights on that day. In such a case the government would be required to compensate the contractor. Giving his overall assessment of the contract he wrote: “Wow, this is a sweet deal here. Does it mean that the contractor does not have to satisfactorily repair damages or defects? What about damages due to contractor’s negligence?” he asked

Another person familiar with construction noticed that there is no provision in the contract for an engineer, let alone provisions regarding verifying the quantity and quality of the work done and signing off on payments. An architect described the design as the ugliest airport structure and layout he has seen, one that looks more like an industrial facility rather than anything close to a modern airport.

 

Jagdeo’s legacy

He wondered too in which decade Guyana will need an airport that caters for eight planes simultaneously, and whether the projections which someone shared with me and I shared with him are not irrationally exaggerated. In fact the feasibility study which appears to have been prepared to justify the expenditure rather than vice-versa was based on traffic generated by Red Jet and Ezee Jet which have long since disappeared. The sheer dishonesty comes to the fore when we remind ourselves that Robeson Benn admitted that there was only a narrow window to grab the Chinese money when the big man from Asia was passing through the region, only enough time for us to grab and no time for thinking. That is going to be one of Jagdeo’s lasting and costly legacies.

One person who was integrally involved in the Ogle Airport Expansion Project described the CJIA project as “nonsense” for which there is “no logical justification.” The Ogle Airport Development Programme saw the transformation of the facility with the extension of the 100 feet wide runway by 2,200 feet and the construction of brand new buildings and facilities. Those have resulted in the airport’s certification as a Category 2C operation capable of accommodating Regional Class Aircraft like the Turbo Prop, Dash 8s and ATR flights operated by LIAT and Caribbean Airlines, as well as executive type class aircraft. And the total cost: US$6 million.

 

I understand that this group which comprises a range of skills including hard-nosed businessmen has offered its services pro bono to the government but has been rebuffed. But while so many persons of competence and relevant expertise are willing to share the knowledge, government officials are stonily silent. It is interesting to observe how so many have rushed to defend the indefensible “Marriott” hotel with its all-Chinese labour and the controversial Amaila project with its inflated costs and uncertain prices. It must be something that the government wants to hide or is afraid to confront. Indeed the only contact from that side of the contract came from an official of the contractor who called me to enquire whether Ram & McRae was interested in being their auditors. Citing the interest of the country over any financial gain, my partners unhesitatingly declined.

 

Financing  

Below is a summary of the contracted cost for the works to be done by the contractor. As you digest these please remember from last week’s column the number of tasks to be done or financed by the government and that are additional to the US$138 million to be paid to the contractor, including some US$20.7 million as an advance payment. Since the financing agreement signed by Finance Minister Dr Ashni Singh with the Export-Import Bank of China was not entered into until November 2012, the initial money had to come from the Consolidated Fund. If the Chinese are good at one thing it is smiling whilst gouging as we see from the financing agreement as well.

Here are some of the features of that agreement:

1. Currency: The loan is in the Chinese currency the renminbi, and all the exchange risks are to be borne by Guyana. If the renminbi appreciates relative to the Guyana dollar, the cost of the loan goes up.

2. Interest: The rate of interest is 2% per annum but this is a disguise because a management fee of 0.75% is taken out upfront.

3. Taxes: No income or withholding taxes apply to any payment under the agreement, whether interest, management fee or commitment fee.

4. Use of proceeds: To be applied by the Government of Guyana for the sole purpose of payment of 94.2% of the contract with China Harbour. What the reader has to figure out is that much of the balance has to go to pay EXIM Bank a Management Fee of 0.75% and a Commitment Fee of 0.5% per annum.

5. Chinese ties: The goods, technologies and services are to be purchased from China “preferentially.” In another era before Guyana sold its soul, no government would have dared to give away its rights to say where and from whom it will buy goods and services.

6. Applicable law: China.
And to think that Sam Hinds and Robeson Benn thought there was such a thing as a free chow mein! I shudder to think what the Chinese think of all Guyanese.

 

The Shah’s toilets

Before getting into those big mega-bucks let us look at the prices being charged for some of the items we all can identify with, things like toilet sets and urinals, washbasins, sinks and showers. Perhaps we resent the sheer vulgarity, obscenity and scale of the price-gouging the Chinese are inflicting on us poor Guyanese or our memory of the infamous golden toilets of the deposed Shah of Iran. But someone must have been intoxicated or corrupted in mind and pocket to agree to pay for each of sixty-nine toilet bowls the sum of US$2,121.06 or $424,212 exclusive of VAT or any other duties and taxes. As the table below shows, the retail price at stores in Georgetown ranges from $15,500 at Zong YA to $30,000 at National Hardware. In other words the wholesale tax-free price being charged by the contractor is 27 times the retail price being charged by an ethnic Chinese trader to 14 times the retail price being charged by National Hardware.

Let us look at the comparable prices for sinks. The wholesale price charged by the contractor is $124,032 compared with $7,100 at Zong YA and $16,995 at Hamson. In other words, the contract price is 17 times that of Zong YA and 7.3 times the price at which Hamson sells them. The situation is hardly different with the other items.

* All prices in the contract are quoted in US dollars. For the purposes of this exercise and for simplicity, a rate of exchange of G$200 to US$1 is assumed, which understates the contract price.

 

Electrical items

For comparison I used one of the more popular stores specializing in industrial and domestic electric items most of which it imports from the UK. Perhaps because of this sourcing, the price differential is less dramatic, but still very significant. In two instances – evacuation signs and double fluorescent lights – the domestic prices are actually higher.

 

Conclusion

The above represent a small sample of items which are available locally and therefore permit comparison. I attempted a similar exercise for other items but because many are so broadly described, a comparison is not possible. Of course the broad and loose description suits the Chinese just fine – we cannot hold them to any standard. That does not mean that we should be any less suspicious about abuse. In fact, we need to be more concerned.

Next week we will look at whether the price disparities evident in those items which allow comparison extend to the runway extension and the construction of the new terminal building. Meanwhile, I hope that what is evident so far causes sufficient concern to demand a complete review of this project. Guyanese seem to have lost the capacity to be offended, shocked or even become angry. Maybe, just maybe, the toilets and urinals are the tipping point.

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Originally Posted by Mr.T:

Based on my own calculation starting with the so claled one laptop per family scam, the average contract is worth just 40% of the claimed value.

Did you try one of the free-laptops in your calcs.

FM
Originally Posted by baseman:
Originally Posted by Mr.T:

Based on my own calculation starting with the so claled one laptop per family scam, the average contract is worth just 40% of the claimed value.

Did you try one of the free-laptops in your calcs.

They are not laptops but outdated netbooks that fell out of fashion after the release of tablet computers. It was old unsaleable stock costing less than U$75, but claimed by the PPP to have cost around U$250.

I contacted the manufacturer in China myself to get a quote on the wholesale price.

Mr.T

Jagdeo Administration accepts 69 toilet sets at $424,000 each in Airport Contract.....

 

…must be intoxicated in mind and pocket to agree to pay – Chris Ram

“…a shocking tale of recklessness and irresponsibility on the part of the Ministry of Public Works and indeed the entire Government who with their eyes open signed a contract that allows the contractor CHEC of Beijing China to fleece this country.” – Chartered Accountant Christopher Ram

 





 

Two toilet sets available in Georgetown yesterday for $33,600 (right) and $22,000 while government agrees to pay CHEC more than $424,000 for one.......





sachin_05

Where is the contract that was referenced? Why didn't Christopher Ram make it available as he seem to have access? Knowing the history of Kaiteur and Christopher Ram and their political motives, I would take their conclusions with a grain of salt as their job is to defame the govt. 

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

Where is the contract that was referenced? Why didn't Christopher Ram make it available as he seem to have access? Knowing the history of Kaiteur and Christopher Ram and their political motives, I would take their conclusions with a grain of salt as their job is to defame the govt. 

Do you read what you post? What an assinine statement. You are a jackass.

Mitwah
Originally Posted by Mitwah:
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

Where is the contract that was referenced? Why didn't Christopher Ram make it available as he seem to have access? Knowing the history of Kaiteur and Christopher Ram and their political motives, I would take their conclusions with a grain of salt as their job is to defame the govt. 

Do you read what you post? What an assinine statement. You are a jackass.

Druggie's family supplied the toilets so this is why Druggie is so enraged every time you criticize the PPP.

FM

Mr Christopher Ram's article contains revelations that are stunning.

When one also takes into account other references to rampant corruption by Ralph Ramkarran, Canadian officials and others, one cannot help having angst against the PPP/C government.

I'm embarrassed to admit that this is the same government I supported on GNI and other social networks up to the 2011 general elections.

As reports of corrupt and other venal activities pile up with every passing week, I can no longer support the PPP/C with a clear conscience. The working-class PPP that Cheddi Jagan built has morphed into a willing facilitator for greedy and unscrupulous people. And I can only hope that voters open their eyes and muster enough courage to show their disapproval through their ballots at the next general elections.

FM
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

Mr Christopher Ram's article contains revelations that are stunning.

When one also takes into account other references to rampant corruption by Ralph Ramkarran, Canadian officials and others, one cannot help having angst against the PPP/C government.

I'm embarrassed to admit that this is the same government I supported on GNI and other social networks up to the 2011 general elections.

As reports of corrupt and other venal activities pile up with every passing week, I can no longer support the PPP/C with a clear conscience. The working-class PPP that Cheddi Jagan built has morphed into a willing facilitator for greedy and unscrupulous people. And I can only hope that voters open their eyes and muster enough courage to show their disapproval through their ballots at the next general elections.

The assumption is that Ram is a person of substance and an upright citizen. This known wife beater and recipient of drug money via his association with his human trafficking brother and druglord Salim. How did he get to build mansion with pool an pool house on an accountant salary? This is the person you believe?

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

Mr Christopher Ram's article contains revelations that are stunning.

When one also takes into account other references to rampant corruption by Ralph Ramkarran, Canadian officials and others, one cannot help having angst against the PPP/C government.

I'm embarrassed to admit that this is the same government I supported on GNI and other social networks up to the 2011 general elections.

As reports of corrupt and other venal activities pile up with every passing week, I can no longer support the PPP/C with a clear conscience. The working-class PPP that Cheddi Jagan built has morphed into a willing facilitator for greedy and unscrupulous people. And I can only hope that voters open their eyes and muster enough courage to show their disapproval through their ballots at the next general elections.

The assumption is that Ram is a person of substance and an upright citizen. This known wife beater and recipient of drug money via his association with his human trafficking brother and druglord Salim. How did he get to build mansion with pool an pool house on an accountant salary? This is the person you believe?

The article is about a corrupt PPP passing another over on us. That he highlights it ought to be a matter of concern to you. If his supposedly nefarious associations have a place then you can speak to that also but how about equal time to the matter before us...theft of our nations money?

FM
Originally Posted by Danyael:
 

The article is about a corrupt PPP passing another over on us. That he highlights it ought to be a matter of concern to you. If his supposedly nefarious associations have a place then you can speak to that also but how about equal time to the matter before us...theft of our nations money?

The moral reputation of the messenger negates the temerity of the message.  Ram has an agenda, he is a known critic of the PPP with political motives. He makes a biased claim without posting the evidence and you folks with a hatred for the PPP jump on the bandwagon without questioning his "analysis". Let him post the contract so we can determine the voracity of his statements. 

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:
Originally Posted by Danyael:
 

The article is about a corrupt PPP passing another over on us. That he highlights it ought to be a matter of concern to you. If his supposedly nefarious associations have a place then you can speak to that also but how about equal time to the matter before us...theft of our nations money?

The moral reputation of the messenger negates the temerity of the message.  Ram has an agenda, he is a known critic of the PPP with political motives. He makes a biased claim without posting the evidence and you folks with a hatred for the PPP jump on the bandwagon without questioning his "analysis". Let him post the contract so we can determine the voracity of his statements. 

The contract does not have to be posted as it is already in the public domain fool. It has been released by the PPP and that is how Mr. Ram has the numbers as does everyone else. Your lies and excuses are getting sillier with every passing day but that is to be expected from a nincompoop like you.

 

If Mr. Ram was wrong about the numbers the PPP would have vigorously objected and brought him before their courts.

 

http://www.kaieteurnewsonline....in-airport-contract/

 

"The CJIA contract was one of three controversial Government projects released to the media last year after months of questions.
It was only after the Alliance For Change (AFC) requested information on the projects in the National Assembly that the ruling People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) released the documents."

Mars
Last edited by Mars
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:
Originally Posted by Danyael:
 

The article is about a corrupt PPP passing another over on us. That he highlights it ought to be a matter of concern to you. If his supposedly nefarious associations have a place then you can speak to that also but how about equal time to the matter before us...theft of our nations money?

The moral reputation of the messenger negates the temerity of the message.  Ram has an agenda, he is a known critic of the PPP with political motives. He makes a biased claim without posting the evidence and you folks with a hatred for the PPP jump on the bandwagon without questioning his "analysis". Let him post the contract so we can determine the voracity of his statements. 

Jackass, the contract does not have to be posted. Go find it and read it on the public domain before making assinine satements.

Mitwah

Guyana agrees to pay Chinese contractor CHEC $297,000 each for urinals in Airport Contract

July 2, 2013 | By | Filed Under News
 can be sourced here for $13,000 

The Guyana Government has agreed to pay China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC), $297,694 for the supply each of the six urinals to be installed in the expanded Cheddi Jagan International Airport (CJIA). A similar urinal is retailed in the capital for prices ranging from $12,000 to $20,000. Checks at retail outlets revealed that urinals were being sold for $11,995 at National Hardware, $13,148 at Gafsons Industries and $17,900 at Hamson General Store. The $297,694 that Guyana has agreed to pay CHEC for a urinal excludes VAT and all duties and taxes required to import the items from China. Under the contract document, the goods, technologies and services to be used are to be purchased from China “preferentially”. Ram in his Business Page column posits, “In another era before Guyana sold its soul, no government would have dared to give away its rights to say where and from whom it will buy goods and services.” Chartered Accountant, Christopher Ram, in his Business page column this past week, lambasted the current administration over several aspects of the contract that was signed and agreed to. The contract was signed on November 11, 2011.

A Urinal selling in Georgetown for $13,300 while Govt. will pay $297,000 each for the urinals to be installed under the Airport Contract.

Signing on behalf of the government for the Ministry of Public Works was its Permanent Secretary, Balraj Balram, and Ren Guangjie, General Manager of the Business Development Department of CHEC. The CJIA contract was one of three controversial Government projects released to the media last year after months of questions. It was only after the Alliance For Change (AFC) requested information on the projects in the National Assembly that the ruling People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) released the documents. The other two projects were the Amaila Falls Hydroelectric Access Road Project, which was awarded to Synergy Holdings Inc. under questionable circumstances and the Marriott Hotel that is currently under construction in Kingston. Under the CJIA contract, Ram in his analysis pointed out that the $138M loan from the China Development Bank, is in the Chinese currency the Renminbi and all the exchange risks are to be borne by Guyana. “If the Renminbi appreciates relative to the Guyana dollar, the cost of the loan goes up.” Ram also points out that the rate of interest is set at 2 per cent, per annum, but the accountant says, “This is a disguise because a management fee of 0.75 per cent is taken out upfront.” He says too that under the contract inked by Government, no income or withholding taxes apply to any payment under the agreement, whether interest, management fee or commitment fee.

sachin_05
Last edited by sachin_05

Dem Boys Seh… De airport project mekking some people tun vampire

JULY 3, 2013 | BY  | FILED UNDER DEM BOYS SEHFEATURES / COLUMNISTSNEWS 

People mekking a lot of noise about how expensive de airport toilet gun be. Dem also talking about the urinal and how it expensive more than similar urinal in Guyana. Dem same people got to keep abreast of technology.
Dem boys seh that is no ordinary toilet. For starters, once people enter to use dem don’t have to do anything. De toilet does undress you and clean up after you in any way possible.
Of course dem boys want to know if de toilet does provide a service fuh people who deh pun de other side.
De urinals got to be special too. But dem boys shudder to think what else de urinal can do. Dem got to wonder who already got dem in dem home and how dem using de urinal and de toilet.
That is why dem boys trying to understand why dem don’t see certain people although these people got all de money in de world.  These people get like vampire, hiding by day and coming out at night, but only going to special places.
Is de toilet and de urinal in dem home.  It got to be that these things giving dem de greatest pleasure.
But all joke and fun aside; how people could try to mek a project more expensive that it really is? Guyana is a poor country that always begging people fuh help, yet it borrowing more than it want and then it gun ask people to help pay back even as de people who borrowing  skimming off de money fuh demself.
That mean that dem tekking and de people paying. In nuff country that is enough fuh de authorities send dem to jail but in Guyana people ignoring all de corruption. Dem boys seh that all people got to do is look at de Marriott.
From de start Jagdeo announce that foreign investors gun put in dem money. To this day not one foreign investor come and de hotel going up faster than a hot air balloon. It mean that de foreign investors live right here in Guyana.
Talk half and brace youself fuh de toilet sensation.

Mars

Mohammed Morsi, the PPP Government and golden toilets

July 3, 2013 | By | Filed Under Features / Columnists, Freddie Kissoon 

At the time of writing, it is unlikely that the legally-elected president of Egypt, Mohammed Morsi, will survive the social contract that he and the population of Egypt agreed to when he was voted in. It looks like he will have to go. The great social contract theorists in philosophy – Thomas Hobbes, Jean Jacques Rousseau and John Locke – have differed in the latitude allowed to each partner in the contract. Hobbes assigned more power to the leader whom he felt needed some form of maximum power. Rousseau took a more romantic but impractical road. He wanted the people to be directly involved in the delineation of policies. Locke felt that the leader must be subject to parliamentary oversight with more power being assigned to the judiciary. There was, however, one gigantic, striking similarity between the three men – the social contract must never be one-sided. It must involve the agreement of both parties and if the leader cannot dispense justice to the other party, the other party is morally right to remove him. This was pellucid in the writing of all three philosophers. It means, then, that in the philosophy of the social contract, the leader has never been assigned unlimited, unaccountable power. It means then that in the philosophy of the social contract, a population has the right to demand the removal of the leader if he breaks the covenant. Morsi broke the social contract. He was foolish to do so. Had there been no revolution, there would have been no Morsi presidency. He took the people for granted. He assumed power and became like the Leviathan that Hobbes wrote about. But Morsi, if he had read Hobbes, would have seen that the great philosopher accepted the rebellion of the people against the Leviathan. Not thankful that a revolution brought him to power, Morsi began to behave like Hosni Mubarak that the revolution toppled. His policies smacked of the authoritarian mentality. He ruled as if he was the president of his party not Egypt. Morsi began a creeping Islamization of Egypt that the people didn’t want. In no other country in the world at the moment is the Morsi error more graphic than Guyana. David Hinds said on television recently that rejection of the PPP hegemony does not have to involve violence. And it need not. But Hinds stressed that there must be demonstrative action. In no other country in the world has the social contract been so violated than in Guyana. Where to start in the enumeration of the PPP’s violations becomes a task as easy as looking at the palm of your hand. We can start three weeks ago with the dismissal of over a dozen workers for purportedly failing a lie detector test. There is no law in Guyana that allows the State to dismiss an employee for failing a polygraph. But it happened three weeks ago at CANU and the Guyanese opposition and people accepted it. It happened three weeks ago again and it will continue to happen. From the polygraph abomination we can go straight into the era of golden toilets in Guyana. On Monday I dropped in at Kaieteur News and I was greeted with the comment; “Freddie yuh gat fuh write on dis.” A few of my KN colleagues showed me the front page for the Monday issue with the photograph of two toilet sets going respectively for $22,000 and $33,000 on the Guyana market. Leonard Gildarie swung around in his chair and asked me how much I paid for my toilet sets when I was building my home in 2007. I told him none cost more than twenty thousand dollars. I don’t think I am worth reading as a columnist if I did not print an opinion on the era of golden toilets in Guyana in my column. I don’t think any citizen of this country should remain silent on the toilet scandal where the Guyana Government has agreed to pay almost half million dollars for one set of toilet seats and is buying 69 of them. The question is why would any politician agree to such a contract? For me there is only one answer – corruption. Where and when are these scandals going to end? My answer is that the violations of the social contract are going to continue if we do not bring the Arab Spring to this land. The nightmare has taken on macabre dimensions when you think that the social contract in Guyana is between the population and a minority government, a minority regime that behaves as if it won the last general elections. It did not!

sachin_05

Govt. defends $424,000 toilet bowls for CJIA

July 4, 2013 | By | Filed Under News 

…says price includes doors, fittings, profits, labour

Government has defended the cost of toilet bowls for the US$150M expansion of the Cheddi Jagan International Airport (CJIA). Yesterday officials said that the contract signed was a lump sum one for that section of the contract. “The articles fail to reflect that under such contracts the cost for each line item usually includes several other costs including materials, labour, overheads, transportation and profit.” According to the contract signed between Government and China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC) on November 10, 2011, the new airport wanted 69 toilet bowls costing US$2,121.06 each. This worked out to US$146,353.14 or over $29M. This translated to $424,212 for each bowl.

The proposed new CJIA facility.

Yesterday, in defending the contract price, the Ministry of Public Works said that it wished to “clarify” and “correct the renewed misconceptions being carried by Kaieteur News” CJIA’s expansion project. The Ministry said that the stated costs of the bowls included the costs of the sewer lines and cubicle doors. “For the particular sanitary items mentioned, there is no pricing stated for sewer lines, washroom cubicles and doors and the many fittings associated with the washroom; these are all catered for in the line item pricing  such as “toilet set”  – as is the case for  all lump sum contracts.” However, in the same Bill of Quantity listed in the contract, there are line items for vertical washbasins, urinals costing US$1,488.47 each; sink sets costing US$620.19 each and shower sets at US$387 each. It also included pipes, corrosion holders for pipes and butterfly valves. There are no explanations as to what were included in these prices. According to the Ministry, it is “deliberately misleading for one to extract a line item indexed cost and represent that cost as the cost for the stated line item while completely ignoring the associated costs related to the item given the distributive nature of lump-sum contracts.” The Ministry also argued that the airport expansion contract pricing is “very competitive and reasonable when compared to other airport contracts.” According to the Ministry, the costs for CJIA’s expansion are comparative in terms of square meters. It listed Chicago Midway US$281; Denver Colorado US$284; Washington US$353 and JFK Blue US$1,000 as against CJIA’s US$300 per square meter costs. The Ministry also compared airport expansion to that of Bahamas –US$409M; St Vincent & the Grenadines – US$240M; St Maarten – US$232M; Cayman Island – US$244M; Barbados US$100M; Antigua & Barbuda – US$45M; Turks & Caicos– US$10M and El Salvador – US$32M as against Guyana US$150M. “Guyana needs to have the necessary air transport facilities and infrastructure if it is going to attract new carriers the diaspora, business travelers and tourists in the new competitive environment,” the Ministry said. However, it has been pointed out that the CJIA project may be difficult to compare to others as there are tax concessions unlike the others. Government is obligated to supply sand and other filling materials. The government has also waived all duties, taxes, royalties and fees for which the contractor would have been obligated. Conservative estimates has placed the expansion’s costs at US$250M, taking into account the waived taxes and sand filling and other expenses that the Guyana government will have to undertake. In the case of St Vincent, the most relevant comparison in terms of regional airports, the US$240M costs is associated with a brand new airport and not an extension or expansion. A brand new runway will see a landing distance of 2623 meters with three distinct inter-connecting apron areas. The apron area will cater for commercial, general aviation and cargo. It also includes a three-storey terminal building with 171,000 square feet of floor space, designed to handle 1.5M passengers per year. It will also accommodate the bigger, wide body Boeing 747-400 flights. New lands were acquired for the airport in St. Vincent. The Guyana Government has tagged the airport as improving the local tourism climate and geared to attract bigger planes than the ones currently landing. The constraints at CJIA, argued Government for the expansion, makes it impossible to tap into markets out of Africa and Asia, a distinct possibility given the country’s strategic location at the northern tip of South America. However, the project has been facing criticisms after it was signed days before former President Bharrat Jagdeo left office in November 2011. This year, the Opposition blocked over $5B from going to CJIA’s expansion project, saying that enough clarity on the spending has not been forthcoming.

 

A contract for a building whether residential or commercial is based on the architect plans provided which include electrical, telephone and cable, data and internet and plumbing. The building contractor has to include all plumbing pipes, conduits, electrical wireing, cable tv conduits and wireing, internet and data conduits and wireing .  To say sewer pipes are separate from the build contract is a bareface lie.

 

 Light fixtures, appliances, sinks and sink valves, toilets, face basin, towel holder, hands dryer, mirrors and shower heads are normally on separate bids. The only way they could charge that kind dough is if that figure include complete installation of all of the above inclusive of tiles and cubicle walls and doors which are also on separate bids...  

sachin_05
Originally Posted by sachin_05:

Govt. defends $424,000 toilet bowls for CJIA

July 4, 2013 | By | Filed Under News 

…says price includes doors, fittings, profits, labour

Government has defended the cost of toilet bowls for the US$150M expansion of the Cheddi Jagan International Airport (CJIA). Yesterday officials said that the contract signed was a lump sum one for that section of the contract. “The articles fail to reflect that under such contracts the cost for each line item usually includes several other costs including materials, labour, overheads, transportation and profit.” According to the contract signed between Government and China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC) on November 10, 2011, the new airport wanted 69 toilet bowls costing US$2,121.06 each. This worked out to US$146,353.14 or over $29M. This translated to $424,212 for each bowl.

The proposed new CJIA facility.

Yesterday, in defending the contract price, the Ministry of Public Works said that it wished to “clarify” and “correct the renewed misconceptions being carried by Kaieteur News” CJIA’s expansion project. The Ministry said that the stated costs of the bowls included the costs of the sewer lines and cubicle doors. “For the particular sanitary items mentioned, there is no pricing stated for sewer lines, washroom cubicles and doors and the many fittings associated with the washroom; these are all catered for in the line item pricing  such as “toilet set”  – as is the case for  all lump sum contracts.” However, in the same Bill of Quantity listed in the contract, there are line items for vertical washbasins, urinals costing US$1,488.47 each; sink sets costing US$620.19 each and shower sets at US$387 each. It also included pipes, corrosion holders for pipes and butterfly valves. There are no explanations as to what were included in these prices. According to the Ministry, it is “deliberately misleading for one to extract a line item indexed cost and represent that cost as the cost for the stated line item while completely ignoring the associated costs related to the item given the distributive nature of lump-sum contracts.” The Ministry also argued that the airport expansion contract pricing is “very competitive and reasonable when compared to other airport contracts.” According to the Ministry, the costs for CJIA’s expansion are comparative in terms of square meters. It listed Chicago Midway US$281; Denver Colorado US$284; Washington US$353 and JFK Blue US$1,000 as against CJIA’s US$300 per square meter costs. The Ministry also compared airport expansion to that of Bahamas –US$409M; St Vincent & the Grenadines – US$240M; St Maarten – US$232M; Cayman Island – US$244M; Barbados US$100M; Antigua & Barbuda – US$45M; Turks & Caicos– US$10M and El Salvador – US$32M as against Guyana US$150M. “Guyana needs to have the necessary air transport facilities and infrastructure if it is going to attract new carriers the diaspora, business travelers and tourists in the new competitive environment,” the Ministry said. However, it has been pointed out that the CJIA project may be difficult to compare to others as there are tax concessions unlike the others. Government is obligated to supply sand and other filling materials. The government has also waived all duties, taxes, royalties and fees for which the contractor would have been obligated. Conservative estimates has placed the expansion’s costs at US$250M, taking into account the waived taxes and sand filling and other expenses that the Guyana government will have to undertake. In the case of St Vincent, the most relevant comparison in terms of regional airports, the US$240M costs is associated with a brand new airport and not an extension or expansion. A brand new runway will see a landing distance of 2623 meters with three distinct inter-connecting apron areas. The apron area will cater for commercial, general aviation and cargo. It also includes a three-storey terminal building with 171,000 square feet of floor space, designed to handle 1.5M passengers per year. It will also accommodate the bigger, wide body Boeing 747-400 flights. New lands were acquired for the airport in St. Vincent. The Guyana Government has tagged the airport as improving the local tourism climate and geared to attract bigger planes than the ones currently landing. The constraints at CJIA, argued Government for the expansion, makes it impossible to tap into markets out of Africa and Asia, a distinct possibility given the country’s strategic location at the northern tip of South America. However, the project has been facing criticisms after it was signed days before former President Bharrat Jagdeo left office in November 2011. This year, the Opposition blocked over $5B from going to CJIA’s expansion project, saying that enough clarity on the spending has not been forthcoming.

 

A contract for a building whether residential or commercial is based on the architect plans provided which include electrical, telephone and cable, data and internet and plumbing. The building contractor has to include all plumbing pipes, conduits, electrical wireing, cable tv conduits and wireing, internet and data conduits and wireing .  To say sewer pipes are separate from the build contract is a bareface lie.

 

 Light fixtures, appliances, sinks and sink valves, toilets, face basin, towel holder, hands dryer, mirrors and shower heads are normally on separate bids. The only way they could charge that kind dough is if that figure include complete installation of all of the above inclusive of tiles and cubicle walls and doors which are also on separate bids...  

Gburd should lend the government his mouth to use as a toilet at this airport every time he open his mouth sheer shit come out

FM

Dem boys seh…De airport toilet story is fuh King Liar

JULY 5, 2013 | BY  | FILED UNDER DEM BOYS SEHFEATURES / COLUMNISTSNEWS 

 

 

Brazzy buss cry de other day because dem boys tell he that he toilet don’t have a door. When dem boys mention that fact he jump. He want to know who been in he house and why. He only relax when dem boys tell he that dem read he answer in de papers because de Waterfalls paper question de price fuh de toilet that he plan to put in at de Cheddi Jagan International Airport.
Cheddi was a man who never like confusion but de set he got now causing confusion. He come in Donald dream de other night and ask he why de airport got so much confusion. Donald couldn’t answer because he had nothing to do wid de airport project in de first place.
Cheddi ask about de toilet and Donald sweat. He jump out he sleep. Bharrat wasn’t in Guyana, as usual, and dem boys know why, He running from Cheddi. He got too much to answer. Brazzy don’t sleep.
He is de man who come up wid de excuse fuh de toilet price. He tell dem boys when he was building he house he estimate had wall and de contractor had to know that de wall got to get how much window and how much glass and how much door and hinges and lock and security grill.
He seh is de same system he use fuh de airport suh when he talk bout toilet set de contractor know that he talking bout fittings and pipes and connections, but no door, because he got another estimate fuh all dem door.
Dem boys seh that he got to come better than that. Is things like that mek de nation pay so much fuh government project. De estimate got hidden costs and hidden quantities. In this case, if De Ram didn’t see it, that extra money did gone in somebody pocket. That is what was happening all de time wid dem government project.
Guyana at de mercy of de crooks.
Talk half and tell Brazzy fuh come better than that.

Mars

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