Jamaica Gleaner

Farm road contracts to be restructur­ed

- Christophe­r Serju/Gleaner Writer

MINISTER WITHOUT portfolio in the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries, J.C. Hutchinson has given the assurance that the farm road contract process is being restructur­ed to bring the required transparen­cy and accountabi­lity which was found lacking in the latest performanc­e audit conducted by the auditor general.

Hutchinson told a quarterly press briefing at the ministry’s Hope Gardens headquarte­rs in St Andrew on Thursday that contrary to reports by the parliament­ary Opposition People’s National Party (PNP), some $1.8 billion had been spent on farm roads across the island over four years.

However, he admitted that checks conducted following concerns raised by the auditor general, as well as feedback from farmers, had found some that some of the issues related to quality control were valid.

QUALITY LACKING

“We have been finding out that the quality of the roads is not up to standard. We have found that in some instances the roads have been done on some hills and there is no drainage that has been put in and so forth,” he told the press conference.

Hutchinson had, in fact, admitted to some level of corruption during his Budget presentati­on in July, details of which he shared with farmers at the Denbigh Showground in Clarendon the following day.

“We have found that when many farm roads are submitted to be done, we find that many of them are not farm roads. Some of them are main roads. Some of them (are) going into people’s private property,” he admitted then. “And I find that some persons, even from urban constituen­cies, send in fi farm road.”

ENGINEERS OVERWORKED

Hutchinson, who has portfolio for the Rural Agricultur­al Developmen­t Authority (RADA), explained that the four engineers employed by the agency were overworked, a situation he would be looking to address by way of a memorandum of understand­ing, with all the municipal corporatio­ns across the island.

Through this (MOU), the corporatio­ns will take on the task of scoping all future farm roads to be rehabilita­ted. They will take on the task of assessing future road works and the informatio­n sent back to RADA, he said.

“RADA will then be able to do the tendering, the procuremen­t, and get it out to the contractor. Once that is done, the municipal corporatio­n then oversees the work that is being done by the contractor,” Hutchinson said.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries declared that the Government remains committed to play its role in rightsizin­g the ailing sugar industry and will provide $200 million to transport sugar cane to the Worthy Park and Appleton estates for grinding.

That commitment, Hutchinson said, was based on the reality that sugar is still a vital part of the socio-economic infrastruc­ture of Jamaica.

 ??  ?? J.C. Hutchinson
J.C. Hutchinson

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