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Former Member

Letter: Nepotism, cronyism and favouritism are of the highest order at City Hall

Dear Editor,

I observed in the press recently that the Prime Minister, Brig (r’td) Mark Phillips, met with the Mayor and a delegation from the Georgetown Municipality, once more to attempt to alleviate the suffering of residents across the city, who are once again plagued by flooding caused in no small measure by the mismanagement of the city’s drainage and other infrastructure.

And though this is a commendable initiative by the Prime Minister, he needs to understand that he is, as they say in Guyana, “flogging a dead horse”.

It is no accident that, in spite of the enormous assistance — financial, material, and other — provided by the Central Government, the city is in such a decrepit condition. The Georgetown Municipality is in a vegetative, paralysed and nugatory state quite simply because of incompetence, corruption, and indolence. Nepotism, cronyism and favouritism are of the highest order at City Hall. No other Local Government agency across the world could have so many friends and family members working together, all square pegs in round holes. It seems as though the criteria for getting a job there is knowing someone, or being related to someone there.

Just imagine: Councillors sat and squabbled for decades over trivial matters, while City Hall crumbled into its current ruinous state. The Central Government had to rush in and rebuild it. They needed an administrative building, and the Government had to finance it. A grant was given to them to repair the Stabroek Market Clock, but they never fixed it, and the grant was forfeited. The market itself had rehabilitation works done under an IDB-funded project, and not its own money. The City Police Training Centre is in a ramshackle state despite the Council claiming to have spent $47 million rehabilitating it. The Abattoir, which got damaged as a result of an accident, got repaired by a private entity, but is still basically non-functional. The Le Repentir Cemetery is a jungle; the Kitty Market, another financial black hole, is yet to be completed; the Promenade Gardens, a public park, is closed to the public; and the Day Care Centres are all shuttered.

The Council no longer builds or maintains roads or bridges in the city; the City Police Bicycle Patrol is dead; stray animals are no longer rounded up; and public health inspection of yards is no longer done.

So, what does the City Council use all of the hundreds of millions of dollars it collects each month from property rates, stall rentals, licences, container and other fees for?

It spends it on itself, doling out fat cat salaries that amount to well over a hundred million dollars a month; paying for needless public relations services; and paying a whopping amount to contractors, while Georgetown remains in a deplorable state.

Why is the Local Government Commission allowing this?

Faithfully,
Magagula Jackson

Council must ensure contractors, agencies adhere to city bylaws – PM Phillips

Jun 15, 2022 News -- Source -- Kaieteur News Online -- https://www.kaieteurnewsonline...-bylaws-pm-phillips/

Kaieteur News – The Georgetown Mayor and City Council (M&CC) is being urged to use its authority to ensure that contractors and agencies involved in building construction within the city adhere to the city bylaws.

This comes even as officials of the Georgetown council complained about the regular flouting of the city bylaws by ignoring the need for engaging the City Engineer’s Department before embarking construction projects within the city.

From left: Mayor Ubraj Narine, Deputy Mayor, Alfred Mentore and Prime Minister, Mark Phillips, engaged in discussion about the city bylaws.

Mayor of Georgetown, Ubraj Narine, and a team from the Georgetown M&CC have since engaged Prime Minister, Mark Phillips, on the matter.

During a recent discussion with the Prime Minister, the Municipality was encouraged to use whatever authority it has to force contractors and agencies to comply with the city bylaws.

The remarks were made by the Mayor and Deputy Mayor Alfred Mentore, who bemoaned the construction of drains and revetment work without consultation with the City Engineer’s department.

During the discussion, the Deputy Mayor revealed the officers of the Council are faced with a predicament in this regard.

He said that there are instances when the Council makes its decisions but its members are called directly by state officials on behalf of well-connected persons and ordered to act counter to those decisions.

Mentore said that the matter is made worse by the Local Government Commission (LGC) when it fails to act on the decisions of the Council to discipline officers who act contrary to the regulations.

In his remarks, Mayor Narine highlighted the work on Vlissingen Road next to the Guyana Defence Force Base – an area that he says has technical challenges due to the pump station being located nearby.

Narine explained that the drains being constructed are narrower than what existed, and no consultation was done with the Council on the construction.

The Mayor also highlighted the work being done on Camp Street in front of GRA which has already shown signs of compromising the surrounding drains.

The Mayor stated that the Council is not anti-development but promotes collaboration to ensure all stakeholders are involved to avoid unnecessary inconveniences to the citizens of Georgetown.

Last January, Mayor Narine pointed to the need for new building codes in the city.

Back then, the City Mayor noted that need for improved building codes in the city has been a point of discussion for some time now, however, with massive development already ongoing and even greater development on the horizon, the issue is taking on new importance.

The current building codes are considered wantonly insufficient in giving the M&CC authority to properly mandate and enforce the proper measures in the construction of buildings.

“It can be rectified if we work on it right now; we can rectify it before it gets worst. It will help us because a lot of major buildings going up, construction is happening and a lot of the investors are here. We can have a round table discussion to come to some kind of consensus,” he said.

Added to this, the Mayor recently noted that the Central Housing and Planning Authority indicated that it depends on the City Engineer’s department to approve plans before making its decisions and encouraged the engineer department to ensure that all plans satisfy the Municipal requirements before forwarding them to the CH&PA.

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