Jamaica Gleaner

Foreign affairs ministry relocation put off till March 2020

- Paul Clarke/Gleaner Writer paul.clarke@gleanerjm.com

THE RECENTLY completed multibilli­ondollar Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade building located in downtown Kingston will not be occupied until about March 31, 2020, when it is furnished and fully functional.

That is the word from Permanent Secretary Ambassador Marcia Gilbert-Roberts in response to queries about missed deadlines for its occupancy.

Chinese firm Jiangsu Jiangdu Constructi­on Group Company Ltd built the 11-storey edifice with 17 department levels to accommodat­e 285 staff members.

The building also boasts a conference room, a children’s centre, a dining area, as well as an area for medical care, leisure and recreation, and an auxiliary room and is a marked improvemen­t on the ministry’s current location in New Kingston.

After constructi­on ended in October, the building was formally handed over to the Government by the Chinese authoritie­s at a ceremony at its Port Royal Street, downtown Kingston, address on Wednesday, October 16.

But a source has informed this newspaper that ongoing plumbing problems have contribute­d to the relocation delay.

When contacted, Gilbert-Roberts said she was not aware of any plumbing issues at the new building and has offered to verify that claim.

Further, The Gleaner was directed to speak with the Urban Developmen­t Corporatio­n (UDC), project manager for the $3.9 billion project, but repeated calls to General Manager Heather Pinnock went unanswered.

Questions have been raised as to when the ministry will move into the new building after missing the June 2019 deadline.

The Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation (MEGJC) said that a retenderin­g exercise was partly to blame for the botched relocation plan.

“The package for the furniture for the new building had to be retendered because the first set of bidders did not meet the criteria outlined in the tender package,” the ministry said in a statement.

The MEGJC also said that in response to a second advertisem­ent, a second set of bids were returned on October 8, 2019, and that the tender evaluation process has begun. The procuremen­t process will take about two months while the successful bidder will require two to three months to source and install the furniture.

 ?? GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR ?? A seagull flies over the garbage-infested Kingston Harbour in search of food on Sunday. An investigat­ion has been launched into a fish kill in the Kingston Harbour in the vicinity of Carib Cement last Thursday.
GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR A seagull flies over the garbage-infested Kingston Harbour in search of food on Sunday. An investigat­ion has been launched into a fish kill in the Kingston Harbour in the vicinity of Carib Cement last Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica