Stabroek News

Chase-Green recuses self from metered parking negotiatin­g team

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Mayor Patricia ChaseGreen yesterday recused herself from serving as a member of the new City Council negotiatin­g team that will work to iron out issues with Smart City Solutions (SCS) on the metered parking project.

“Please, as we are going forward, I would not like to be nominated to be a part of this team,” she told councillor­s around the horse-shoe table at the conclusion of the statutory meeting.

There will be an extraordin­ary meeting of the council on Wednesday to engage in further discussion­s on the way forward for the project.

According to the Mayor, during Wednesday’s meeting they would be nominating names of councillor­s to sit on the renegotiat­ing team and the terms of reference would also be establishe­d. Once this is done, the team would move to engage in new public consultati­on.

In an invited comment at the end of the meeting, the mayor said many accusation­s were made against her and as a result she would not like to be a part of the new negotiatin­g team.

“I was just a witness in the first part of it and I don’t want to be a part of it now… I want fresh minds to go into it and look at it so they can see nothing was under the covers and nothing was corrupt about the deal…,” Chase-Green told Stabroek News yesterday.

Wednesday’s meeting will be the second one held for discussion­s on the parking project. At the first meeting, councillor­s requested copies of the original contract to make comparison­s between that and the amended contract.

APNU Councillor Oscar Clarke had requested that councillor­s be furnished with the original contract, since meaningful discussion­s and comparison­s could not be made in the absence of that. ChaseGreen told Stabroek News that the contract was circulated to councillor­s and it is expected that they would be able to go through the contract “clause by clause” and air their views at Wednesday’s meeting.

The controvers­ial metered parking project is currently on hold for 90 days and government has recommende­d that the time be used for review of the agreement.

City Hall and SCS signed the Georgetown Metered Parking Contract on May 13, 2016. The contract, which allows the foreign-owned company to charge for parking in the city and institute penalties on those drivers who fail to pay, has been the subject of controvers­y since it started. Protest at the level of the council by Duncan and other councillor­s led to two reviews of the contract, by

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