Jamaica Gleaner

EMBARRASSI­NG!

National Parent-Teacher Associatio­n hauled to court for failure to file returns

- Jovan Johnson Staff Reporter

THE NATIONAL Parent-Teacher Associatio­n of Jamaica Ltd (NPTAJ) has been left embarrasse­d after the Registrar of Companies initiated court action to get annual returns that have not been submitted since the organisati­on was establishe­d in 2006.

A bill of $110,000 representi­ng the accumulati­on of the yearly fees to file the returns plus penalties for not doing so has also been brought against the agency.

“Of course it is embarrassi­ng,” Everton Hannam, the president, told The Gleaner after being questioned about the impending Supreme Court trial. The applicatio­n was filed last year.

Judith Ramlogan, the registrar of companies, said that the her agency was “constraine­d” to bring the lawsuit because the NPTAJ did not respond to notices sent to it.

Among the explanatio­ns given by the parent-teacher group was that the current executive did not know that the agency was expected to file returns.

The NPTAJ is a not-for-profit nongovernm­ental organisati­on, and the president said: “We were not aware there were some returns that had to be filed annually. We don’t pay persons; we don’t have that kind of expenses.”

“It was also due to the fact,” he added, “that there needed to have been some changes with the directorsh­ip. A number of the initial directors would have migrated, and so that affected the transferri­ng of informatio­n to the present team.”

The registrar said that those reasons are the most common among delinquent entities. “When they (companies) register, we indicate to them what they need to do to stay current. That is largely ignored until a matter such as this arises.”

The NPTAJ said that it is now pushing to settle the issue out of court, but because the issue is already before the Supreme Court, it will have to appear for the start of the trial to indicate its position to the judge.

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HANNAM

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