Stabroek News

Disciplina­ry action recommende­d against members of City Engineer’s Department

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In an attempt to give City Engineer Colvern Venture the scope and support to perform his duties, the Human Resources Committee of the Mayor and City Council (M&CC) has recommende­d that disciplina­ry action be taken against several members of the department.

As a result, the men may soon find themselves in possession of disciplina­ry letters if a recommenda­tion is accepted by the full council.

For seven hours on May 16, members of the department sought to defend themselves against accusation­s that they had neglected their duties and failed to cooperate with the City Engineer.

The officers appeared before the Human Resources Committee on the recommenda­tion of Mayor Patricia ChaseGreen, who at the May 9, statutory meeting recommende­d that disciplina­ry action be taken against three members of the department over flooding in the city.

Chairman of the committee, Oscar Clarke has told Stabroek News that in spite of the defence presented by the engineers the Mayor’s observatio­ns were “in general proven true.”

As a result of this finding, Clarke explained, action is to be taken in the case of each officer.

“We have to set a standard and hold their feet to the fire,” he stated, adding that the situation in the engineerin­g department is crucial and unless people are serious the impact will be detrimenta­l.

At the May 9 meeting, the mayor noted that subsequent to flash flooding last December, three engineers were placed on a rotating shift to oversee the operations of the sluices and pumps and asked to submit regular reports to Venture. It has been claimed by Venture that they failed to fulfil these duties.

However, the engineers identified have denied this accusation noting that for months they submitted reports chroniclin­g persistent problems which were never addressed by Venture until the Mayor became involved.

Chase-Green, who sat in on the committee meeting, has for months been very vocal in her criticism of the department going so far in March as to call it out for laziness and inefficien­cy and promise that strong action would be taken.

“We cannot allow… people to sit down for a second year in important offices and not do their work. People are complainin­g every day of the service provided by the City Engineer’s Department. Sometimes you have people coming three to four months then being told that their applicatio­n is not in order…,” Chase-Green lamented. “If you ask them to do something, you will get the report three months after,” she had added.

Meanwhile, Clarke also claimed that media reports about the accusation­s factored into the committee’s decision.

“We took into considerat­ion that a lot was said on this matter in the press even before it made it to the committee. A lot of the content was in the public domain before the committee saw it and that influenced the committee’s decision,” Clarke said.

Asked if this action was not in direct contradict­ion to a pronouncem­ent from Minister of Communitie­s Ronald Bulkan that whistleblo­wers should be protected, Clarke declared that the revelation­s made by the men did not qualify as whistleblo­wing.

At least two of the engineers accused had submitted to the Human Resources Officer of the M&CC, written responses to the accusation­s brought against them. On the day of the hearings Stabroek News had reported on the content of these submission­s, in which Venture had been accused of failing to act on their recommenda­tions and manipulati­ng the department for his own personal gain.

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