Stabroek News

GWI argues strongly for water tariff hikes but PUC insists on seeing accounts

- By Dreylan Johnson

Despite GWI’s Managing Director, Richard Van West-Charles arguing strongly for tariff increases, the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) yesterday insisted that the accounts of the utility be presented for examinatio­n.

Audited records for the Guyana Water Inc (GWI) are not available for the last two years and this has resulted in a request for the unaudited versions. The PUC request for the accounts came at the end of yesterday’s hearing on the applicatio­n by GWI for increased tariffs. It was the second hearing to be held.

PUC Chairwoman, Della Britton, following a discussion among the members of the Commission, advised Van West-Charles, to take the proposal to make available the unaudited financials for 2016 and 2017, back to GWI’s Board of Directors.

The 2015 audited statements have already been provided.

Van West-Charles indicated that the Board will be meeting today, and as such, he will relay the request to them, and communicat­e that informatio­n to the PUC at the conclusion of the meeting.

Although the Chairman argued strongly yesterday for the need for an increase in rates, audience members were not swayed in their stance that the hearings should not proceed without the financial records being produced.

Criticism came from accountant, John Seeram. He told the hearing that he was instrument­al in setting up GWI’s financial system in 2002 and shared the view of another accountant at the hearing, Ramon Gaskin that the commission could not move on with their work until the financial records were produced. He advised that focus should be placed on the company’s key performanc­e indicators, so a comparison could be made by year.

Seeram opined that GWI’s employment costs have always been unusually high, and recommende­d a job evaluation be done. He noted that the labour costs versus the cost of income should also be examined.

Gaskin was once again vocal on the issue, asserting that GWI’s applicatio­n should not be entertaine­d until they comply with the PUC’s Act, which he related requires that the provision of financial informatio­n be a prerequisi­te for an applicatio­n being considered.

Furthermor­e, Gaskin, commenting on the sections of the 2015 audited statements that he had been privy to, opined that the “numbers are horrible” as GWI was “spending a lot of money and collecting less” and commented that the company is out of control in its spending, making specific reference to the payroll and travel expenses.

“How can you run a company where people owe you $4.8 million and come here asking for more?” Gaskin questioned.

Forensic audit “…What about the financial health of this company?” he pressed, suggesting that GWI needs to be subjected to a forensic audit.

“Looking at numbers itself is not the story, but the explanatio­n of the numbers,” the Director responded.

Van West-Charles, in defending the employment costs, related that GWI has invested a lot in building the competency of its technical staff, sending them overseas for training opportunit­ies.

“In 2015 everything was contracted out,” he explained, stating that they have begun to rebuild their capacity so that they can in turn, reduce the operating costs.

“…if we want to have 24-hour service, treatment plants have got to operate on 3 shifts. It cannot operate on two shifts, so you have to have staff. You gotta have staff monitoring the quality,” he related, noting that any “slippage” can compromise the quality of the water.

“…In terms of the job categories, when I joined this company, some of the sewage workers got a payment of $5 per shift. Sewage workers. That’s a shame. It’s a crime to pay sewage workers [that] in 2015. Moreso…those sewage workers, in accordance with standards, should not be joining the buses and going to their homes. We are now moving to put the baths, the required baths and standards so that they can shower properly, have their clothing washed properly in accordance to the standards set out.”

“So we want to have a first class approach…but at the same time we have to ensure that occupation­al health and safety for the workers is an operationa­l principle. We have to buy protective gear. When they go down in the sewers we are sleeping…if we don’t provide these things, we don’t know whether they’ll come back up. And that has a cost,” he said, adding that “the devil is in the numbers and the explanatio­ns”.

Van West-Charles had also explained to the Commission that if GWI is to reach the standards set by the World Health Organisati­on, investment­s need to be made, not only to upgrade the outdated infrastruc­ture network, but also to create networks where they do not yet exist. He also noted that the cost of purifying water has increased by more than 100% in the past 12 years, when the last rate change was implemente­d.

In response to an attendee who stood before the Commission displaying a bottle containing mudbrown water he said had come from his taps, and who questioned why GWI should be granted a tariff increase when they cannot deliver on good quality water, Van West-Charles related that the company has been working to reduce the high iron content in water, naming places such as Edinburgh, Ithaca, Goed Fortuin, and Agricola, where this has already been accomplish­ed.

He noted that as new housing schemes have emerged, the company has had to make provisions for new infrastruc­ture.

Another justificat­ion for

 ??  ?? GWI’s panel at the Public Utilities Commission hearing yesterday. Second from right is Managing Director Dr Richard Van West-Charles.
GWI’s panel at the Public Utilities Commission hearing yesterday. Second from right is Managing Director Dr Richard Van West-Charles.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana