Stabroek News

Many of Sharma’s questions were already discussed at City Council meetings

-

Dear Editor, Please refer to a letter which appeared in your Stabroek News issue of Friday, December 29, 2017 on page 7, captioned ‘It is time for another Commission of Inquiry at City Hall’ by Councillor Khame Sharma.

It has not been the practice of the Town Clerk to reply to letters written by councillor­s in our dailies because councillor­s have the right to express their concerns and to comment on matters they believe are affecting their ability to perform in their constituen­cies; they are elected officials. Inherent in that is the responsibi­lity to be accountabl­e to those who elected them to serve on local government bodies. However, it is this very position of councillor that obliges them to be truthful and accurate in their attempts to represent issues and events in the organizati­ons in which they serve citizens. Officers of the council too, particular­ly those with clearly defined statutory duties, powers and responsibi­lities, have an obligation to the council and the city as a whole because they are being paid from the city’s Treasury to provide vital municipal services to local communitie­s.

Understand­ing my role as Town Clerk and the need for all citizens to be properly informed about the realities at City Hall I feel a deep obligation to make three points on the letter by Mr Sharma.

I have to say that although I have the utmost respect for the Councillor, on examining the contents of his letter, I am shocked by a worrying demonstrat­ion of his ignorance, not only of his role as a councillor, but also of the way in which the council is managed. This has influenced his decision to pen a letter with over twenty questions to the press.

For this reason, I must respectful­ly encourage the Councillor to read the Municipal and District Councils Act, Chapter 28:01, which stipulates and explains the different processes involved in the management and governance of the Mayor and City Council and by extension the City of Georgetown.

First, it is important to note that the council has an adequate structure that facilitate­s reporting responsibi­lities of the administra­tion to the council and citizens of Georgetown. This permits questions of informatio­n and clarificat­ion on any and all matters affecting the functional­ity of the council. Further, the council meets fortnightl­y for statutory meetings. Also, there are allowances for extraordin­ary meetings, special meetings and committee meetings to deliberate, discuss and make recommenda­tions, decisions and policies. Again, there are minutes, agendas and supplement­ary documents on the proceeding­s of all meetings of the council. The answers to Councillor Sharma’s questions are not “blowing in the wind”, they are in the records of the council.

Therefore, it is very strange that Councillor Sharma would write a letter to the press to publicly ask questions, many of which were already discussed at statutory and other meetings of the council and for which the minutes are available in the archives of the council. One other point, this is the kind of action that makes it difficult for the council to earn public trust and confidence in its effort to sustainabl­y develop Georgetown. If the Councillor would only take time to familiariz­e himself with the Act and pay attention to the discussion­s and debates then he would find his action of writing letters to the press to ask basic questions unnecessar­y.

I will give two examples: In his letter on the question of the Kitty Market, at 14: “When will the first phase of Kitty Market be completed, including the sanitary block, by the Council and vendors on the street corners re-located to their stalls in the market?”

However, citizens would recall that the Kitty Market was in a ruinous state for many years; it became an embarrassm­ent to that community, an eyesore. Stallholde­rs were operating in a dangerous place in that building. Under this new administra­tion, that facility was given priority. In the face of harsh criticisms, the council used its own money from its very shallow treasury to begin restoring the market because of its historical, community and economic significan­ce. Yes, we had some setbacks because of resource constraint­s. Yes we missed timelines. But where was Mr Sharma when the market was falling apart under a previous administra­tion that could have very well afforded to restore that heritage building? Mr Sharma is a resident of that community but never penned a line during those years when the council was starved of resources and prevented from implementi­ng revenue-earning projects.

Today, Mr Sharma is a Councillor of the City Council with a very critical voice. Nothing is wrong with that, but it is necessary for me to point to that as a reference to demonstrat­e the level of partisan politics being played out at City Hall and its implicatio­ns for our ability to get things done. If this were not the case, then instead of asking disempower­ing questions about when the council will complete the market that had reached a state of near collapse, he could have asked empowering questions like, how can I as a councillor assist to restore the Kitty Market? Or what more can we, as a council, do to hasten the restoratio­n of that facility.

Again, at 16 the Councillor asked: When will elections be conducted for a new Mayor and Deputy Mayor for 2018 as required by law? When this question was addressed by the Town Clerk, at the council’s last statutory held on Wednesday, December 27, 2017, Councillor Sharma had left his seat and the precincts of the chamber without observing the appropriat­e protocol. However, I explained to the council that according to the Municipal and District Councils Act Chapter 28:01, Section 10, “The term of office of the Mayor and that of the Deputy Mayor shall, subject to this Act, be one year, commencing on the first day of the month following upon their election but the Mayor and Deputy Mayor shall, notwithsta­nding the expiry of his term of office, continue to hold office until his successor enters upon office and thereupon he shall retire.” Since the incumbent Mayor and Deputy Mayor commenced their term of office on April 1, 2017, elections for those offices would be held in March 2018. However, they will remain in office until their successors are properly sworn in and in place to perform their functions beginning April 1, 2018.

Again, his reference to occurrence­s in the towns of Linden and New Amsterdam by secret ballot is testimony to the challenge we face at City Hall. Methods of voting are decided upon by the councillor­s involved in their respective jurisdicti­ons. The City Council has always determined what approach it would use in its elections of Mayor, Deputy Mayor and Committee Members. How is it possible for a councillor serving in the nation’s capital not to be aware of this basic process in city governance? Perhaps, the Honourable Councillor has a hidden agenda and is attempting subtly to test an intention to propose another system of voting at the Council for the elections of Mayor and Deputy for 2018. Even so, there is no need for this action because the councillor can simply make his proposal on the day of the elections, which of course will be put to a vote at the Council.

Regrettabl­y, many of the other questions in his letter really trivialize the importance of the council and the serious role councillor­s ought to play in securing the integrity of their local communitie­s and promoting the welfare of their citizens.

That notwithsta­nding, I remain very optimistic and confident that in 2018, the council will continue to have substantia­l achievemen­ts in the areas of solid waste management, drainage, the environmen­t and the general economy of the city through strong collective leadership, innovation and solid partnershi­ps with all stakeholde­rs.

Yours faithfully, Royston King Town Clerk City of Georgetown

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana