Stabroek News

Done deal and then what?

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Finally, after months of what appeared to be indecision, the government has suspended the parking meter project for three months. This is according to an order made by Minister of Communitie­s Ronald Bulkan yesterday, the second such in a matter of a week.

Yesterday’s order removed control over whether Smart City Solutions (SCS) continues to operate in Georgetown or not from City Hall. And to indicate that it was firm the government also ordered the Guyana Police Force to prevent SCS staff from operating in the city. This came after Minister Bulkan’s first order, which directed the Mayor and City Council to suspend the project for three months, was subjected to manipulati­ve obfuscatio­n by Town Clerk Royston King and his cohorts around the horseshoe table on Monday last. At an extraordin­ary statutory meeting called specifical­ly to deal with the minister’s order, Mr King allowed the tabling of a dubious motion calling time to allow for a legal opinion into the suspension order to be perused. In response to concerns raised by other councillor­s that the substantiv­e agenda item had not been dealt with, APNU Councillor Oscar Clarke said: “The lawyer advised us and on the basis of the lawyer’s advice, we are saying let us put this thing down until council can study the legal advice. The minister would want to know what the council’s lawyers have advised them.”

This is all well and good, but raises the question as to whether it was the same lawyers who had advised on the veracity of the original parking meter contract, if so then we sincerely doubt that the minister or any right-thinking citizen for that matter would be pleased. We should recall that the original contract was for 49 years with an option for another 49 and that it offered the city just 20 cents on every dollar.

We recall too the words of Mayor Patricia Chase-Green in June last year, “We took a deliberate decision not to share the contract because we wanted to secure the investment. We have had bad experience­s with sharing contracts, proposals and initiative­s only to have them subtly taken away from the council.” She had also said that the contract which was signed by the Town Clerk was a “private document of the administra­tion.” We believe that government interventi­on at this point could have derived a much different outcome. With all due respect, Mayor Chase-Green was talking nonsense. As an elected official serving the people of Georgetown, she had no right to conceal the contract. Mr King was also very wrong to sign such a document, which clearly would

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