Stabroek News

Dela Britton sworn in as Chairman of PUC

-says telecoms liberalisi­ng key issue

-

Newly-appointed Chairman of the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) Dela Britton said yesterday that the body is being “retooled” in preparatio­n for the liberalisa­tion of the telecommun­ications sector.

Britton, an attorney-atlaw by profession took the oath of office during a ceremony at State House and replaces retired judge Prem Persaud who demitted office at the end of March after serving for nearly two decades.

Asked about her immediate priority, she said that given that the country is on the cusp of telecoms liberalisa­tion, the Commission is “being retooled and I hit the ground running tomorrow (today) to have in place all the necessary directives because our mandate under the new regulation­s will expand beyond what is currently in place, so plans are afoot right now to have all the things in place before liberalisa­tion comes into force”.

She was unable to say if the commission has “all the required brains” but said that there is a dynamic group of profession­als as well as commission­ers with years of experience who are all schooled on how to operate and how to deliberate on certain issues.

Britton explained that retooling means having the necessary personnel in place to assist the commission. “…our duties are strict under the legislatio­n and because they are strict (it) means we have mandatory obligation­s to the consumers, to the utility, the telecoms utility and to the minister”.

She said that presently the commission advises the minister but is aiming to have a greater collaborat­ion with the ministry.

Britton was admitted to the Guyana Bar in November 1995 after completing her Legal Education Certificat­e at the Hugh Wooding Law School. A few years later she enrolled in the Fordham University School of Law to pursue a Masters of Law in Internatio­nal Trade Policy, Intellectu­al Property, Corporate Governance and Internatio­nal Law.

President David Granger in his remarks said that the PUC during its 27 years existence has enforced a regime of regulation­s that safeguards the public interest without jeopardizi­ng the economic sustainabi­lity of those utilities.

Meanwhile, Minister of Public Telecommun­ications, Cathy Hughes reminded that the legislatio­n which paved the way to liberalise the sector was passed in the National Assembly last August and subsequent­ly assented to by the President.

Hughes said that she is working to have the sector liberalise­d by the end of July, noting that the whole process of spectrum management pricing has to be looked at.

She explained that the National Frequency Management Unit now comes under a new telecoms agency as outlined in the legislatio­n. “…they are looking at the structure of that agency, the skills that will be required, how we are going to be able to merge a frequency management unit. The legislatio­n has several different new requiremen­ts and we are working on all of that and at the same time, there are negotiatio­ns with ATN and GTT that are going ahead almost like two tracks at the same time”, she said.

She said that the discussion­s with the two telecommun­ications companies are going very well but are very detailed. Hughes pointed out that other agencies such as the Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA) are involved in this process.

She said that the outstandin­g issues with GTT include concerns about the new pricing of spectrum.

“It is a completely new system and a new process and therefore it takes time to plan it, to get the right people and to move ahead but I have put a very ambitious date of the end of July and I am saying if we miss it, it is going to be as close we can after that”, she said.

 ??  ?? President David Granger and Dela Britton at State House Presidency photo) (Ministry of the
President David Granger and Dela Britton at State House Presidency photo) (Ministry of the

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana