Jamaica Gleaner

What is the JLP doing about George Wright?

- ■ Andrew Holness is prime minister of Jamaica. This is a summarised version of the Prime Minister’s address to Parliament on May 11 in relation to the Montego Bay Bypass constructi­on. Please send feedback to primeminis­ter@opm.gov.jm.

IN THE event the Jamaican Labour Party (JLP) has forgotten, it is now a month since it promised that its “requisite organs would promptly meet” to discuss George Wright’s membership in the party and to determine its “next steps” once a determinat­ion was made.

Promptly, should the JLP’s brass need reminding, means immediatel­y, or doing something without delay. So procrastin­ating for a month, if that has, indeed, been the case, wouldn’t satisfy the urgency with which the party led the public to believe it would handle the George Wright affair.

Neither would – or should – Jamaicans be satisfied if they are told by the JLP that “its requisite organs” did in fact meet and arrive at conclusion­s on how to deal with Mr Wright, but that those outcomes couldn’t be shared because of internal party considerat­ions. For, implicit in the party statements of a month ago was a promise to take the public fully into its confidence. Dithering would lead to a not unreasonab­le conclusion of further contortion­s by the JLP, after its facilitati­on of Mr Wright’s leave of absence from Parliament and its removal of the Government whip from the MP, to avoid dealing with this matter frontally.

George Wright, it is recalled, is the parliament­ary representa­tive for Westmorela­nd Central, part of the cohort of first-timers swept into the House on the JLP’s election wave of September 2020. He, however, has been the centre of controvers­y since a video emerged last month of a man, alleged to be Mr Wright, violently battering a woman. The images on that video would, of themselves, cause outrage. The public’s anger was exacerbate­d by the video’s emergence after the spate of murders of women and intense debate over genderbase­d violence.

Mr Wright has not denied that he is the beater in the video. He has publicly said nothing of the affair, although the JLP says he has acknowledg­ed the seriousnes­s of the allegation­s against him and their implicatio­ns for his role as a parliament­ary representa­tive. The Opposition has a parliament­ary motion for Mr Wright’s suspension from the House, which is yet to be debated.

Our sense is t he JLP is politicall­y flummoxed on how to deal with the matter, hoping that it will just go away or become, as Jamaicans say, another nine-day wonder. That must not be. The JLP shouldn’t be allowed to shirk its responsibi­lity and obligation to Jamaicans in this matter.

BY VIRTUE of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) framework, we had revised many of our laws to clarify, and to give institutio­nal definition around things like incentives and so forth, and it was a sentiment shared across the floor that this needed to be done.

But there will be, at some point in Jamaica’s developmen­t, special projects that are large and complex and frontier projects that would require the Government to enter into direct contractin­g. I believe that this project is one of them.

I believe that the Montego Bay perimeter road as agreed and acknowledg­ed by the Opposition, and the Opposition leader, is a national project. We are developing our public administra­tion and Jamaica has done very well in expanding its public administra­tion.

We now have many institutio­ns that deal with integrity and transparen­cy and compliance, procuremen­t and more. Where we are now is not trying to circumvent the very institutio­ns that we have debated here in Parliament and establishe­d. What we’re trying to do is to make them work as we have defined them, but the presentati­ons by the leader of the Opposition, and others, would suggest that in some way, the Government is acting outside of the establishe­d institutio­ns, outside of the law, and that the Government is acting in a way illegally.

NOT ONE CENT WASTED

Today, the very people who would want to create that narrative were the very people who created the law to allow for this and we, Madam Speaker, on this side, carried it through with regulation­s in 2018, because it is well understood that this is an important part of our procuremen­t process and it is not unusual to Jamaica.

We must make every effort to ensure that not one cent of Jamaican taxpayers’ resources is wasted: not one cent.

The leader of the Opposition totally ignores that there was a process in place, started by this administra­tion with Jamaica Developmen­t Infrastruc­ture Programme (JDIP), but continued and expanded by the administra­tion led by members on that side called Major Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Programme (MIDP), where multiple times what we are proposing to spend here was negotiated and there was no concern then about value for money.

Where was the concern about value for money by the then government, now in Opposition?

In the same way that the Opposition is now concerned about this exception that we are creating by approving this order, which will allow us to directly contract with China Harbour, that level of concern should have been expressed with equal energy and vociferous­ness then.

At that time under that arrangemen­t, which was a loan, Jamaica taxpayers are still paying back those loans today.

So, I want the public to understand that we are not neglecting your best interest, as would be the suggestion of the Opposition.

WHY IS THIS IN JAMAICA’S BEST INTEREST?

First is that the model of bilateral arrangemen­ts, which results in direct contractin­g, is a model that Jamaica can say we have benefited from.

We can point to several projects that have been done as a result of that. Now, that model of the bilateral arrangemen­t with our strategic trade partner, China, comes with certain conditions.

There are conditions on the loans. There are conditions on the materials used. There are conditions on the concession­s that we would have had to give. There are conditions on the labour that is used.

If you’re asking about transparen­cy, you are not allowed to share the contractin­g documents and the loan documents. So, in other words, the concerns that the Opposition has come here with, those should have been made when they were engaging in the bilateral arrangemen­t.

Upon reviewing our fiscal affairs we found that it was in the best interest of Jamaica not to pursue another loan from our strategic partners in China.

I want it to be clear China has been very helpful to Jamaica and we are most grateful for the support and assistance that China has given to us in difficult times, when nobody remembered Jamaica or would invest in Jamaica.

ACT WITH PRINCIPLE

But we always act with principle and in our interest, and it was in our interest to change the relationsh­ip from a borrowing one to one where we can finance projects or China can invest strongly in Jamaica, and that is what we have now, an investing relationsh­ip.

China Harbour engaged with us and the Government of China, the EXIM bank of China engaged with the Government of Jamaica in good faith on the same mechanism as was done under MIDP and, therefore, China Harbour went ahead and made investment­s in doing the prefeasibi­lity, in doing its geotechnic­al and other such works.

China Harbour would have mobilised for this project with the expectatio­n that it was going to get this project. We in the middle of it changed our position and decided that we would no longer go the route of borrowing, we would fund it out of our cash.

The tender process for this, with a best effort, would be a year or probably at little bit more than a year. In fact, it probably would be more because other contractor­s coming in would have said that as new contractor­s, China Harbour would have to be excluded because it would have an unfair competitiv­e advantage.

But if you were to exclude China Harbour, the constructi­on period would be more protracted because a new contractor coming into the procuremen­t process would want to be able to verify the risk of the request for proposal (RFP), the tender documents that are put out and to tender on a highway like this, it’s a long process.

The issue of value for money existed under the bilateral contractin­g process and it is an issue here.

Now, how do we get around this issue? Meaning, how do we guarantee, or give as higher possibilit­y of guarantee of securing value for money, to the Jamaican public?

1. This project will be designed according to what is called The American Associatio­n of State Highway and Transporta­tion Officials; so that along with ISO standards and our quality management plan will ensure that the quality of the work is guaranteed.

So, whoever will be the project engineer or the project supervisor, that is the standard against which they will be judging all output relative to payment, so there is an open-source standard.

2. Jamaica developed the NWA specifical­ly with a system that it calls its negotiatin­g team. That is the NWA’s value for money negotiatin­g mechanism and that pulled on experts in the field, public officials working in at the time the NWA, NROCC and other areas. That team would negotiate the price of every element of the contract with China Harbour. That is what was done under MIDP and that is how we were able to secure, as best as possible outside of a competitiv­e process, value for money.

Even in a competitiv­e contract, there is still some level of negotiatio­n that we will have to do, and let us also be clear, a competitiv­ely let contract does not always lead to the best result.

Most time it will, but not all the time, because in the past we have selected the lowest cost tenders and after we select them, they end up can’t do the job for the price they promised. We ended up having to go and negotiate with them and we end up paying much higher than what they told us they could do it for.

EXPAND THE CONVERSATI­ON

I’m not in any way trying to diminish the value of competitiv­e tenders, it is important to note, but we must expand the conversati­on because in trying to create a negative narrative, we as public leaders, we have a duty to bring knowledge to the people, we can’t just be onesided in our conversati­on.

So, this is a discretion provided in the law for the Government to use and it is not a discretion that should be used arbitraril­y or wantonly, and the Government is seized on it, which is why I am happy for this debate to explain to the public that the Government isn’t doing anything nefarious or hiding anything or trying to, in some way. At some point you have to have some faith in your government, that the government is going to act in your best interest. It’s a mature decision to come out of a borrowing relationsh­ip.

It is a mature decision to step out of a bilateral contractin­g process and going to one where there will be greater transparen­cy than if we had contracted bilaterall­y because all of these documents, which relate to the contract, will be public.

The Opposition went to court to prevent the contractor general from being involved in the pre-contractin­g phases. I mean it’s as if we have short memories, but yes, we have no objections to that.

The team that we’re putting forward will be a multisecto­ral fairly broad-based team that can sit opposite the China Harbour people and bring levity, understand­ing and reason to prices. So, I’m expecting that prices will be moderated and approximat­e competitiv­e prices.

Ninety per cent of the employees on the contract must be Jamaicans, the workers on the contract must be paid at the GIC rates, that is the industry standard rates.

The issue was raised, why are we shutting out local contractor­s? From where I sit, I have seen vast improvemen­ts in the capabiliti­es of our local contractor­s. They are taking on multibilli­on-dollar projects, several at the same time.

But there are some contractor­s who simply don’t have the capacity and we see it in overruns. We see it in delay in works, but we are developing at core competence in contractin­g.

The question however, is, for example, a contract like this would come with the requiremen­t of multibilli­on dollars in bonds, would we be able to find the local contractor­s who would be able to mobilise the performanc­e bonds to do it?

There are other issues regarding the mobilisati­on of equipment, the mobilisati­on of highly technical skills.

The leader of the Opposition says it’s a big project, but it’s not complicate­d. I think the leader of the Opposition should acquaint himself with the project because it does require, as it did with the completion of the North South link, significan­t geotechnic­al work to be done in addition to the constructi­on of a major bridge, which is of substantia­l length, so it is not a simple project.

My expectatio­n is that there will be significan­t subcontrac­ting happening here, so Jamaican contractor­s will benefit from this.

 ??  ?? Andrew Holness GUEST COLUMNIST
Andrew Holness GUEST COLUMNIST

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