Jamaica Gleaner

JUTC head says he will not resign, despite opposition pressure

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

THE MANAGEMENT of the Jamaica Urban Transit Company Limited (JUTC) is brushing aside calls by the Opposition People’s National Party (PNP) for the resignatio­n of the board of directors and the managing director, Paul Abrahams.

Opposition Spokesman on Transport Mikael Phillips yesterday accused the JUTC of breaching procuremen­t guidelines in the awarding of a contract valued in excess of $50 million to a company in which the brother of a member of the board has an interest. He claimed that the board member is also chairman of the finance committee.

According to the opposition spokesman, the contract was awarded to Millennium Security Limited (MSL) to provide services in property loss and recovery assessment, accident investigat­ion, and damage assessment. He said that it also covered services in disciplina­ry hearings for all worker- and workplace-related infraction­s.

Phillips said that the company was paid a deposit for the first year of the contract. He called on the contractor general to launch an investigat­ion into the matter.

NO CONTRACT

The opposition spokesman also called on Transport Minister Mike Henry to disclose whether the contract had been taken to Cabinet for its considerat­ion and approval.

However, in his response, Abrahams said that the company had no current contract with Millennium Security Limited.

“We wish to make it pellucidly clear that there is no current contract with MSL. Whatever is being alluded to by the opposition spokesman does not exist. There is no contract. Neither is MSL providing any security services to the JUTC,” the bus company said in a statement yesterday.

“We entered into discussion­s with MSL, who submitted a proposal, which was presented to the board for review. We wish to make it clear that when the matter was being discussed, director Clement Ellington recused himself from these discussion­s. The board subsequent­ly gave management approval to engage Millennium under a sixmonth pilot project.”

It was not clear when the pilot project commenced or how much was paid to MSL for its services.

The JUTC further divulged that during the internal preparatio­ns to engage MSL, it was observed that the value of the proposed services would fall within the parameters that required competitiv­e tender. The process was halted, and the company, by way of publicatio­n in The Gleaner (October 21, 2017) and The Observer (October 24, 2017), invited interested persons to submit bids.

Additional­ly, the JUTC noted that during discussion­s regarding accident investigat­ions, there was an agreement with MSL to provide additional security services on a temporary pilot basis to protect spare parts, which appeared to vanish from the company from time to time. It said that the service was only temporary and came to an end on September 20, 2017. It said that an invitation to tender has been published for additional security services.

 ??  ?? Paul Abrahams, managing director, Jamaica Urban Transit Company
Paul Abrahams, managing director, Jamaica Urban Transit Company

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