Jamaica Gleaner

Bring it on!

Robinson blasts Holness over national ID, COVID-19 claims

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OPPOSITION SPOKESMAN Julian Robinson on Tuesday blasted Prime Minister Andrew Holness over his continued insistence that a national identifica­tion system could solve the verificati­on issues being experience­d by the Government as it seeks to dole out money to the public.

During the sitting of the House of Representa­tives, Robinson asked for more money to be disbursed to members of parliament to distribute to their constituen­ts, who are buckling under the economic pressure brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Robinson said that people he knew had difficulti­es accessing the Government’s COVID Allocation of Resources for Employees (CARE) programme, noting that persons have applied for the compassion­ate grant on behalf of their parents.

“So the TRN of the bank account which is provided would not be consistent with the TRN of the applicant because the person doesn’t have a bank account. So in a case like this the system would bounce that person. But this is a person in need,” said Robinson. “Is it that the only household helpers who can benefit are those who are part of the union? If you are not a part of the union, how do you go about verifying that you are a household helper?” he asked in Parliament.

It was at that time Holness mentioned the usefulness of a national.

But Robinson who was an applicant in the recent NIDS case, ruled in his favour by the courts, fired back at the prime minister. “You keep saying about the ID. If you want the ID then bring it on. It’s one year since the ruling. Bring the legislatio­n, bring the regulation­s here. We had only one consultati­on on NIDS since then, but you keep talking about the ID.” Robinson said the Opposition was ready to work on the legislatio­n. “But you keep saying NIDS and you haven’t brought anything to the Parliament,” Robinson pointed out further. Holness informed that the NIDS policy is now with the chief parliament­ary council.

“We are putting this on a fast track because we see how very important it is to use identifica­tion as a means of being able to give support, protection and to help with order in the society,” Holness said.

The Government has commenced verificati­on activities to enable citizens who have applied for assistance under two components of the $10-billion CARE programme to start receiving grants by April 30.

Meanwhile, Finance Minister Dr Nigel Clarke has lamented that the lack of basic identifica­tion and bank account informatio­n is significan­tly hampering many Jamaicans from accessing services and slowing down productivi­ty at government agencies.

He says many persons are still attending government agencies for services which could have been done over the Internet.

“There are over 20 tax types that you can pay online. Yet, even though that facility exists, Tax Administra­tion Jamaica just released numbers that say … that 80 per cent of the business that Jamaicans go to the tax office to conduct … could be done online,” Clarke said at a press conference at Jamaica House on Monday.

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