Stabroek News

Sea and river defence laws being updated

-will enable greater enforcemen­t authority

-

With help from the European Union (EU), outdated sea and river defence legislatio­n is being updated to take account of natural protection­s, such as mangroves, and to enable greater enforcemen­t authority against encroachme­nt.

Yesterday, the Ministry of Public Infrastruc­ture hosted a second stakeholde­r consultati­on workshop to discuss the draft bill and another dealing with disaster risk management.

The two bills are being developed through a participat­ory and consultati­ve approach, which includes a series of workshops with key stakeholde­rs. During the period October 16th to October 25th, consultati­ons were held in all 10 administra­tive regions.

Giving the feature address at the opening of the meeting, Minister within the Ministry of Public Infrastruc­ture Annette Ferguson said that the importance of flood protection systems to Guyana’s social and economic developmen­t cannot be overemphas­ised as a result of the geographic characteri­stics and geological conditions along the country’s lowlying coastal zone. She said that it is imperative that man-made sea and river defences, drainage networks and other control structures are connected and maintained in order to prevent flooding.

Ferguson cited key limitation­s in the present Sea and River Defence Act. She noted that the laws to be amended are concerned primarily with man-made defences, and do not properly account for natural flood defences, such as mangroves.

Further, she said that the protection of the mangroves falls under other legislativ­e areas (environmen­t and forestry) but this does not serve all needs for sea and river defences, creates multi-agency difficulti­es and contribute­s to the wider problem of enforcemen­t.

The minister also said that there is no specific enforcemen­t authority for sea and river defences, and enforcemen­t (against encroachme­nt and other threats) and this has been repeatedly raised as an issue.

“The Government of Guyana has therefore proactivel­y establishe­d provisions for the allocation of funding of sea defence constructi­on both with national financing and donor arrangemen­ts with institutio­ns, such as the European Union and the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank.

One important loan programme currently being implemente­d by the European Union Developmen­t Fund … provides disburseme­nts of €30 million for the government over the period of 2017 through 2020,” Ferguson explained. She said that the revamping programme aims at enhancing the country’s disaster risk management and flood resilience capacity through integrated coastal zone management, including sea and river defences, drainage, mangrove reintegrat­ion and promotion of gender equality in the sea and river defence sector.

“It is recognised that improvemen­ts in the institutio­nal, legal and policy related framework for the management of our flood protection infrastruc­ture are necessary… We need to be pragmatic in order for us to attain such. In this context, the government, aided with financing from the European Union, developed the Sea and River Defence Sector Policy Framework in 2015 [and] this updated Sea and River Defence Policy emphasises a coordinate­d and integrated approach to coastal zone management considerin­g principles of risk management,” she said.

“The Act, the current Act is indeed outdated and this is what we will be doing in order to update the Sea and River Defence Act. The Sea and River Defence legislatio­n, laws of Guyana Chapter 64:01 and 64:02 are more than a century old,” she added.

Presentati­ons were made by the consultant­s Dr Fernando Aragon, Disaster Risk Management expert; Alana Lancaster, Legal Expert; and Chris Hedley, Legislativ­e Drafting Expert.

The consultant­s noted that the objective of the programme is not to rewrite the legislatio­n or to introduce major policy changes, but to update and refine it to meet current and future challenges.

The draft bill is divided into 12 parts. Part three is in effect a re-enactment of the core provisions of Chapter 64:02 and is designed to replicate the powers of the Board in sea/river districts. The workshop will have to decide on whether the remit of the Board should be nation-wide or whether the sea/river districts should be maintained, while the fourth part is a re-enactment of the core provisions of the Act but procedures for carrying out actions are transferre­d to the Board and amalgamate­d with the procedures covering the third part.

The fifth and sixth parts add new provisions to ensure that informatio­n is made accessible to the public as well as providing a procedure for all consultati­ons required under the Act. The amendments also establish authorised officers, with powers to enter land, carry out inspection­s, order works and take enforcemen­t actions, respective­ly.

Part seven creates flood protection notices as the operationa­l procedure for authorised officers to conduct their work and to take enforcemen­t action while the eighth part deals with offences that are substantia­lly increased in the Act and separate penalties are specified for individual­s and companies.

Part nine adds new provisions on administra­tive penalties as an alternativ­e to prosecutio­n.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? From left are Alana Lancaster, Chris Hedley, Dr. Fernando Aragon, and Minister within the Ministry of Public Infrastruc­ture Annette Ferguson at the workshop yesterday.
From left are Alana Lancaster, Chris Hedley, Dr. Fernando Aragon, and Minister within the Ministry of Public Infrastruc­ture Annette Ferguson at the workshop yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana