Jamaica Gleaner

Standards regulator asleep on the job?

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WE ARE being driven to conclude that the decision by the former government, consummate­d by the Andrew Holness administra­tion, of removing product-compliance oversight from the Bureau of Standards Jamaica (BSJ) and giving it to a new agency was either a bad idea or a policy that was badly implemente­d. For the National Compliance and Regulatory Authority (NCRA), it is becoming increasing­ly obvious, isn’t doing a good job.

In the span of three days, two significan­t reports by this newspaper highlighte­d failures by the agency, with potentiall­y grave consequenc­es to the health and safety of Jamaicans. In the event, Jamaicans could well be consuming spoiled, or contaminat­ed food, or could be facing the prospect of their homes, constructe­d with hollow, concrete blocks, tumbling around them.

The BSJ establishe­s standards for goods and services produced and/or sold in Jamaica. Up to 2016, it had a division that was supposed to ensure that those standards were complied with. There were often complaints over the unit’s performanc­e, especially the absence of aggression with which it pursued shoddy goods. That was part of the reason, as well as the need to address a supposed conflict of interest, why Portia Simpson Miller’s government, in 2015, announced the plan to spin off the regulatory department from the rest of the BSJ to establish a separate policy authority.

“The conflict stems from the fact that the Bureau performs conformity assessment­s, sets standards, and then seeks to regulate the standards it has set,” the then informatio­n minister, Sandrea Falconer, said at the time. So, unfettered by these conflicts and constraint­s, the NCRA was expected to bring new energy to the process. That isn’t being felt.

A random survey last week by this newspaper of supermarke­ts in the Kingston Metropolit­an Region, including the community of Portmore, revealed that several had, on open display, a wide range of expired, or nearly expired, products for sale. Some of these items were discounted, suggesting that the business operators were aware of the state of the goods.

Both under the Processed Foods Act and the Standards Act, certified inspectors can order the removal of products that do not meet health or quality standards and cause persons deemed to be in violation of the law to be charged for prosecutio­n.

Lorice Edwards, the head of the NCRA, reported that her agency conducted more than 900 checks of establishm­ents per quarter. Unfortunat­ely, her inspectors seem not to have gone to any of the stores visited by our reporters. Neither did Ms Edwards have at hand further, and specific, data on the actions of her inspectors.

GET ON WITH ITS JOB

It is appreciate­d that consumers often complain directly to the Consumer Affairs Commission, which might coordinate with the health ministry, pushing the NCRA to the periphery of the loop. But the same argument is far less plausible with regard to the NCRA’s regulatory role over the standards for concrete blocks.

Two and a half years ago, there were 128 block manufactur­ers registered with the BSJ, which, presumably, meant that they complied with its standards for their products. Now, there are only 55 such operators. It could be assumed that the 57 per cent decline is the result of a shake-out in the market for block makers. So the registered manufactur­ers are all who now exist.

That, however, would be a myth. Large numbers of block manufactur­ers still openly operate in Jamaica, with neither registrati­on nor certificat­ion by the BSJ. And, it seems, no policing by the NCRA. Indeed, in May 2017, there were nearly 350 block makers known to the BSJ.

Consumers, of course, should, insofar as possible, buy from reputable manufactur­ers with certified quality assurance. But as we noted four years ago, when this matter confronted the BSJ, the safety issues, or more to the point, potential for catastroph­e, transcend the actions of individual consumers. That is why the NCRA should get on with its job or get someone with competence to do it.

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