Jamaica Gleaner

NEXT MOVE, MR VERNON

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RICHARD VERNON, the new, young chairman of the St James Municipal Corporatio­n (StJMC), is, on the face of it, getting a handle on things. At least he is saying the right things, including identifyin­g the source of the substantia­l amount of money needed to fund his council.

The good thing is that he is not proposing to open new avenues of funding. Neither is he merely asking the central government for additional help. This is money owed to the StJMC.

The issue now is for Mr Vernon to collect it. Which, as with his other pronouncem­ents, is one of the basis on which he will be judged.

At his inaugurati­on after the local government elections a month ago, Mr Vernon pledged to run a transparen­t administra­tion, including resuscitat­ing the dormant Local Public Accounts Committee (LPAC) – a body whose job is to review the performanc­e of the local government with respect to the quality of its service delivery, ethical standards and accountabi­lity. The committee’s chairman must be a person who is not an elected member of the council, while up to half of the all members can be similarly selected.

But while the establishm­ent of these committees is a requiremen­t of the law, insofar as they have existed it is merely with a limp. They received little attention and had even less influence.

DELINQUENT OWNERS

Mr Vernon’s commitment is therefore significan­t, and one to which this newspaper will hold him to account – as we will with respect to his other obligation­s under the Local Governance Act.

For instance, the finance committees of municipal councils (they are supposed to oversee the financial affairs of the local authoritie­s) are also required to have up to half non-elected members, depending on allocation of membership between the majority and minority councillor­s.

This committee, and its operation, will be important if Mr Vernon is serious about collecting the nearly J$3 billion he says is owed to the St James Municipal Corporatio­n.

Speaking at last week’s biennial trade expo of the Montego Bay Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MBCCI), Mr Vernon lamented that property owners and business operators in St James were not paying their taxes and fees, thus denying the municipali­ty of a substantia­l portion of the funds it requires to deliver services to the community.

A portion of the finance for municipal government­s comes from the licences and other fees they collect from businesses in their jurisdicti­ons and for the services they provide.

According to Mr Vernon, of more than 6,000 businesses operating in his parish, 72 per cent were delinquent in paying their local rates.

“Only 28 per cent of businesses are paying for your licence to operate in the space within the municipali­ty,” he said.

Those who do not pay owe “over $200 million”, placing additional pressures on the finance of the corporatio­n.

But fees contribute a relatively small portion of the finances of the municipal authoritie­s. The bulk of their resources comes from the 90 per cent of the property taxes collected in their jurisdicti­ons, to which they are specifical­ly entitled. The remaining 10 per cent is allocated by the central government to the municipali­ties on a needs basis.

SEEK PARTNERSHI­PS

Additional­ly, 25 per cent of motor vehicle licence fees collected by the central government goes to the parishes, with 75 per cent of that amount allocated on the basis of miles of parochial road in each municipali­ty as a percentage of the amount of such roads in the island.

But according to Mr Vernon, in a parish where 60,038 parcels of land are registered, 57 per cent of owners are either in arrears or non-compliant with their taxes.

“...Only 43 per cent of St James is property tax-compliant, resulting in a deficit of $2.5 billion,” he said.

Given that 90 per cent of the amount would go automatica­lly to the municipali­ty, that represents J$2.25 billion of which the StJMC is being deprived.

Mr Vernon is right to urge residents of the parish to do better in meeting their civic responsibi­lities. But moral suasion will not be enough in getting substantiv­e change. That has to be underpinne­d by strong and creative enforcemen­t measures.

Aggressive­ly collecting local fees and charges is entirely the responsibi­lity of the St James Municipal Corporatio­n and leadership provided by Mr Vernon.

However, collecting property taxes is a central government responsibi­lity that rests with Tax Administra­tion Jamaica (TAJ). So just talking about the deficit will not mean much to St James.

In addition to whatever else he does locally to encourage property owners to pay their taxes, it is in Mr Vernon’s interest to seek partnershi­ps, and to do innovative things with the finance ministry and TAJ, to ensure the outstandin­g debts reach the StJMC’s coffers.

That will require a new approach to parish management – and not just in St James.

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