Stabroek News

City councillor­s defer vote on parking meter project

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The Georgetown City Council yesterday deferred a decision on the future of the metered parking project and instead voted to make the final report by its negotiatin­g committee available to the public to guide the way forward.

Mayor Patricia Chase-Green also announced at an extraordin­ary statutory council meeting yesterday that the suspension of the project would continue for another month to facilitate further consultati­ons on the project.

The temporary halt of the project was facilitate­d by the central government’s suspension of the bylaws and this fact prompted PPP/C Councillor Bisham Kuppen to question whether the government had extended the suspension.

“If I, as Chair of this committee who is dealing with the parking meter and I think the councillor­s need more time… nobody is going to push my button to do anything in a haste! Nobody!” Chase-Green declared.

The negotiatin­g committee’s report recommends five options for the council, including continuing with the project with concession­aire Smart City Solutions (SCS), albeit with a renegotiat­ed contract, or alternativ­ely discontinu­ing the project by rescinding the contract and leaving the city without metered parking. Another option is for the council to request a further suspension of the implementa­tion of the metered parking project, pending the outcome of several ongoing court challenges, after which it may use the court ruling as a legal guide to inform any further action.

After presenting a summary of the committee’s report at the meeting, Team Legacy Councillor Malcolm Ferreira, who served as chairman, emphasised that councillor­s must be “wise and brave” when making their decision.

However, APNU Councillor Monica Thomas, in a brief remarks, said, “This is a thick document and to be honest I would have appreciate­d it if the councillor­s would have been given more time to go through this document in it its entirety. I feel I would have been well informed to make a decision then… I can’t just skim through it and be ready to discuss.”

Thomas was the only councillor who asked that they be given more time to go through the document. She was not challenged although APNU councillor­s Akeem Peters, Alfred Mentore and Roopnarine Persaud, as well as PPP/C councillor­s Kuppen and Khame Sharma were prepared to engage in discussion­s on the report.

Chase-Green, in an address after Ferreira, said that copies of the report, which she referred to as a “public document,” should be made available to the public. She recommende­d that the document be placed at the Town Clerk’s Office, the Treasurer’s Office and at the National Library. “I am asking that this document be placed in public places and be shared with anyone… I want councillor­s and a majority of citizens in Georgetown to say, ‘Yes, I am duly informed of every step the council has taken, there is no secrecy to this project…’ so then we can sit and make a conscious decision on how to move forward…,” she emphasised.

Fourteen of the 18 councillor­s who were present voted for the debate on the future of the metered parking project to be deferred and for the report to be available in public spaces across the city, while PPP/C councillor­s Kuppen and Sharma voted against and APNU councillor­s Peters and Mentore abstained.

Notably absent from the meeting were vocal critic of the project Sherod Duncan, of the AFC, as well as APNU councillor­s Oscar Clarke, Phillip Smith and Andrea Marks.

Chase-Green said that a date would be set at the next statutory meeting for discussion­s on the project.

Final report?

Meanwhile, the report would be available for scrutiny until next Friday and persons can make further submission­s, which would be considered at the next meeting.

The council’s decision stunned members of the civil society pressure group, the Movement Against Parking Meters (MAPM), who sat in the public gallery and listened to the presentati­on. “This report is absolutely final. There are no other things that can be added in here. There are no other documents that can be now submitted. This is final. You had four months, that’s done,” said MAPM spokesman Don Singh.

MAPM had led weeks of demonstrat­ions against the project prior to its suspension.

Komal Ramnauth, another vocal MAPM member, also emphasised the group’s call for complete revocation of the contract, while suggesting that ChaseGreen used the meeting to push her own agenda. “The Mayor went ahead and took a vote on it, she didn’t ask any other councillor­s their opinion,” he said, while suggesting that “the Mayor used that to propel what she wanted to achieve, which is a delay on this final decision.”

He too questioned what more the committee could do after submitting its final report.

However, during the meeting, the mayor noted that the committee had not been dissolved as yet. She also said its members would be paid their stipends as promised by the council. She was responding to Councillor Persaud, who asked when councillor­s who served on the committee would be paid the stipend.

Following the suspension of the metered parking bylaws in March, the seven-member committee, led by Ferreira, had been mandated to review the contract, consult with all stakeholde­rs and recommend possible solutions to any impasse that may arise from the implementa­tion of the project.

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 ??  ?? Mayor Patricia Chase-Green holding up a copy of the report
Mayor Patricia Chase-Green holding up a copy of the report
 ??  ?? Monica Thomas on the floor
Monica Thomas on the floor

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