Jamaica Gleaner

More money, more time for FINSAC commission­ers

- Edmond Campbell Senior Staff Reporter edmond.campbell@gleanerjm.com

THE COST to complete the Financial Sector Adjustment Company (FINSAC) report into the collapse of the financial sector in the 1990s continues to spike, with the Government allocating more funds yesterday to pay the commission­ers who have again asked for more time to submit their findings.

After being given a final sevenmonth timeline by Finance and the Public Service Minister Audley Shaw this year to complete the FINSAC report, the commission­ers have been given a further three months to finish the job.

“The report is coming. The writing of the report will commence shortly, and by Cabinet decision, they are given a maximum of seven months to have the completion and publicatio­n of the report,” said Shaw earlier this year in an address at the Mayberry investors’ forum in New Kingston.

Taxpayers will again have to dig deeper into their pockets to cover payments to the commission­ers as the extension beyond July comes with a cost.

Yesterday, Informatio­n Minister Ruel Reid told journalist­s at a post-Cabinet press briefing at Jamaica House that Cabinet had granted approval for a recommenda­tion to the governor general, for an extension of three months and a revised budget of $58.4 million for the completion of the FINSAC report.

“We agonised over this particular decision, and what was presented to us was the actual number of files and the actual work now to be done, which has been costed independen­tly, and on that basis, Cabinet was convinced that yes, the expenditur­e could be supported,” he said.

In January, Shaw reported that an allocation of $35.7 million had been made in the Supplement­ary Estimates to complete the report. However, Reid said that for the three-month extension, the budget has been revised to $58.4 million.

INTENSE PUBLIC DEBATE

The commission of enquiry into FINSAC has been the subject of extensive and intense public debate since the probe started in 2009. The initial duration of the enquiry was six months.

In 2012, the then commission­ers wrote to former finance minister Dr Peter Phillips indicating that they would submit their findings in two parts – April 2012 and August 2012. However, this did not materialis­e.

Commenting on the FINSAC report in 2012, former finance minister Dr Peter Phillips said: “As of today (June 6), there is no report, interim or otherwise, despite taxpayers paying out some $65 million, and there are bills outstandin­g for rental and other costs.”

 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Minister of Informatio­n, Senator Ruel Reid in discussion with Naomi Francis, press secretary at the Office of the Prime Minister before the start of his post-Cabinet press briefing at Jamaica House yesterday.
RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Minister of Informatio­n, Senator Ruel Reid in discussion with Naomi Francis, press secretary at the Office of the Prime Minister before the start of his post-Cabinet press briefing at Jamaica House yesterday.

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