Stabroek News

Granger urges NDCs to drive economic, cultural revitalisa­tion of villages

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President David Granger yesterday challenged Neighbourh­ood Democratic Councils (NDCs) to lead the revitalisa­tion of the economic and cultural lives of villages.

Speaking in the backdrop of local government elections which are scheduled for November 12th,he said that central government through the Ministry of Communitie­s will work with elected local authoritie­s and other stakeholde­rs to develop and improve the quality of life of their residents.

Addressing the opening of the one-day National Conference of Local Democratic Organs (NCLDO) yesterday at the Arthur Chung Conference Centre, at Liliendaal, Granger said, “Village economies must flourish with the establishm­ent of micro- and medium-scale enterprise­s to generate cottage industries and businesses–what one political leader calls a ‘plantain chip economy.’”

Noting that the process of migration is relentless and that people have always moved from rural to urban areas, leaving some areas depopulate­d and that many residents also work outside of their villages, he emphasised that village economies have to be rebuilt to encourage young people, in particular, to remain in villages. In rebuilding to stimulate local employment and enterprise, he said, villagers can grow food again because the village dams are intact. “They can produce goods. They can provide services again. Village lands can bloom again by being placed under cultivatio­n,” he noted,

Village economies, Granger also said, can be revitalise­d like democracy by ensuring there are regular local government elections and that villagers elect local leaders who care for their communitie­s, who represent their constituen­cies and who bring about positive changes.

He also called for the revival of the cultural life of villages.

He said, “Villages must have happy homes. We must prevent drugs from seeping into villages. We must ensure that families are safe and happy and neighbourh­oods are protected.”

He continued, “We must look to make village economies more socially cohesive units, promoting and developing harmony.”

Community centres, he said, must come alive again with authentic, cultural and social activities, and with fair amount of spaces in anticipati­on of regional agricultur­al and commercial exhibition­s, which can bring to the fore a wide range of cottage industries in the country. “The Neighbourh­ood Democratic Councils must drive this revitalisa­tion process. They must ensure local democracy. They must revive the cultural lives and livelihood of people and rebuild strong economies,” he added.

Reiteratin­g his call made at the recent National Toshaos Council that considerat­ion must be given to village improvemen­t plans (VIPs), Granger said these plans are not only for Indigenous Peoples villages but for all villages across the nation.

Every village, he said, must have a VIP, which must be blueprints for improving delivery of services countrywid­e.

Every VIP must address as a priority, he said, the four major category of services – access to public education, creation of employment, the quality of life being linked to the environmen­t, and access to safe water and renewable energy.

Speaking about the conference, which he suggested should be an annual event, Granger said it had its genesis in a meeting with NDC officials in March.

It was an educationa­l experience for him, he said, as officials from across the political divide recounted their problems and the limited resources which they had to solve them.

This convinced him that the country needed a fresh approach to local governance. Those present, he said, were not bound by party politics but by a commitment to their communitie­s to see good things for their NDCs.

The problems were

extensive and pervasive as their NDCs had not been managed by democratic­ally elected councils but my Interim Management Committees (IMCs) imposed on them by the past administra­tion.

“A whole generation grew up knowing about IMCs. They wanted to get rid of the notion that a minister could sit down in Fort Street, Kingston and micro-manage an NDC,” he observed.

At the end of that March meeting, Granger said, it was evident there was need for a structure within which the NDC officials could collaborat­e with their respective RDCs and Central Government to empower the lowest strata of democratic governance, hence the NCLDO.

The NCLDO, he said, is intended to become a platform to promote the work of the NDCs.

“It can provide the practical basis to work with central government and not against central government to strengthen community developmen­t and to improve the quality of life for residents.”

Noting that before entering office in 2015, the then opposition had picketed the last government to hold local government elections, Granger said, “less than a year after taking office we held local government elections.”

With the elections now scheduled for November 12th, he said, “As long as I am President we will have local government elections when they are constituti­onally due. I will find money to make sure that local government elections are held. Democracy is expensive but the alternativ­e is worse.”

say whether they should auction the blocks but they can make that commitment to a reporter from the New York Times but not to Guyanese people.”

Jagdeo said he believes that “if we do not make the right decisions, oil will not really benefit our people.

From the model of the legislatio­n mentioned in the same article on the Natural Resource Fund, which government proposes to create, Jagdeo said, it is to be managed by the Bank of Guyana and overseen by a committee that encompasse­s several independen­t interest groups, including a representa­tive nominated by the Leader of the Opposition.

“We do not want politician­s, that is ourselves, to manage this money. This fund has to be independen­tly, technicall­y managed, not by politician­s and stored by the Central Bank. We have a problem with that model. It departs with best practices, like [in] Norway and the other countries, where they have an independen­t group that manages this. Even the model that they are talking about will present a lot of problems for us because Jordan can call the Central Bank and get some money anytime he wants it,” he said. “This response by the Ministry to the New York Times leaves us even more concerned about the kind of model they are working on,” he added.

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 ??  ?? Government officials and the conference participan­ts. (Ministry of the Presidency photo)
Government officials and the conference participan­ts. (Ministry of the Presidency photo)

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