Jamaica Gleaner

PNP promises accountabi­lity overhaul in municipal corporatio­ns

Party releases local gov’t manifesto days before elections

- Kimone Francis/ Senior Staff Reporter kimone.francis@gleanerjm.com

THE OPPOSITION People’s National Party (PNP) is promising to overhaul how accountabi­lity is exercised within municipal corporatio­ns, outlining that it will, among other things, require them to show how taxpayers’ money is being spent.

The PNP also said that it would mandate quarterly press briefings by all mayors and CEOs of municipal corporatio­ns to update citizens on council activities and publicise representa­tion for the maintenanc­e and repair of roads, drains, verges, garbage collection, and public-cleansing activities.

The pledges were among several listed in the party’s 16-page manifesto released yesterday, three days before the local government elections.

Under the theme ‘Time come for C.H.A.N.G.E’, the party said that it would focus on community developmen­t and citizen security; healthy citizens and healthy communitie­s; access and accountabi­lity; a new vision for local government; garbage-collection disposal and environmen­tal protection; and economic models for success and entertainm­ent regulation­s at the local level.

The PNP said a government it forms will require that municipal corporatio­ns become more transparen­t, publishing their annual budgets in print, electronic, and social media.

Auditor General Pamela Monroe Ellis, in her department’s recently tabled 2022-2023 annual report, issued 22 “disclaimer opinions” to several municipal corporatio­ns for their failure to properly account for billions of dollars spent or in their possession.

STATEMENTS NOT PROVIDED

This means that an opinion could not be formed on the financial statements submitted because the necessary informatio­n and evidence to do so have not been provided.

The PNP has suggested that this would be rectified and added that it would also develop and publish performanc­e-measuremen­t indicators for the councils and mandate the cooperatio­n and timely responsive­ness of key associated partners in the delivery of local services.

The party also said that it would implement a transparen­t process for allocating streetligh­ts, with deeper expansion into solar lighting.

Further, the PNP said it would consolidat­e all scheme roads under municipal corporatio­ns, thereby placing local authoritie­s in charge of the maintenanc­e of roads in local communitie­s.

It is promising to modernise minor water-supply structures by partnering with communitie­s to build water-harvesting systems.

Additional­ly, the party said there would be stricter enforcemen­t of the Building Act to ensure that old and new buildings are accessible for persons with disabiliti­es.

“When the PNP forms government, we will ensure that the Jamaican people have access to beaches and rivers for recreation­al purposes, amending the Beach Control Act to provide rights of access,” the PNP said in its manifesto.

However, civil society body Jamaicans for Justice (JFJ) has taken issue with the timing of the manifesto release, noting that local government is well positioned to implement policies and programmes to address social, economic, and health inequities by ensuring that some of citizens’ most fundamenta­l rights are addressed.

LATE MANIFESTO

“Therefore, to be getting a manifesto just mere days before the election is suggestive of a scant regard for the importance of the local government as another tier of governance,” JFJ’s Executive Director Mickel Jackson told The Gleaner on Thursday.

The human rights group had slammed the PNP and the Jamaica Labour Party, the country’s two main political parties, for failing to produce manifestos even as they debated local government issues last week.

Jackson said unless and until local authoritie­s fulfil the expectatio­ns of them and increase avenues for citizen participat­ion, the country will not see a greater level of interest, which is important for holding government­s accountabl­e.

She said that the suggestion that a manifesto is not important for local government is misguided.

“A manifesto ought to be treated as a commitment of proposed policies. Therefore, citizens can use these as an accountabl­e tool on how well a government and its representa­tives have performed.

“Reasonable questions can then be asked: Having listed your achievemen­ts, what is the benchmark to measure success? How much of what you had promised have you met? Until we start demanding more of our representa­tives, there will not be an improvemen­t in the quality of governance,” Jackson argued.

She urged Jamaicans to call for adherence to the provisions of the Local Governance Act, while insisting that citizens must demand that engagement meetings are held and that they are being consulted.

Jackson said civil society must also engage more with local authoritie­s, and importantl­y, the local public accounts committee must be asked to fulfil what is currently legislated.

That is, to review the performanc­e of local authoritie­s in their ethical and service-delivery standards as well as adherence to procuremen­t and financial management procedures.

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