Jamaica Gleaner

No ID, no access

J’cans will need National Identifica­tion Card to access gov’t goods, services

- Edmond Campbell Senior Staff Reporter

UNDER THE Government’s proposed National Identifica­tion System (NIDS), Jamaicans without a National Identifica­tion Card (NIC) will not be able to do business with government agencies and department­s when it is rolled out in 2019. Additional­ly, persons without the national ID might also face serious challenges as they seek to do business with the private sector.

“The intention is that we will also have on board the private sector, particular­ly internatio­nal institutio­ns, who will not do business with anybody without their NIN (National Identifica­tion Number) and NIC,” Jacqueline Lynch-Stewart, chief technical director of the Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation Division in the Office of the Prime Minister shared at a forum staged by Jamaicans for Justice (JFJ) yesterday at the University of the West Indies.

Lynch-Stewart said that the current bill is not cast in stone, noting that adjustment­s could be made during the upcoming parliament­ary debate.

She argued that already, persons now doing business with the Government require a Tax Registrati­on Number. “My understand­ing is that if you go to a government entity to do business and you don’t have one, then they send you to get one,” she added.

Some participan­ts at the forum raised concerns about the provision in the National Identifica­tion and Registrati­on Act, 2017, that would bar persons without an NIC from accessing government services.

EXTREME MEASURE

At least one participan­t describes the provision as an “extreme measure being implemente­d by the Government”.

Section 41 (1) of the proposed statute states that a “public body shall require that a registered individual submit the National Identifica­tion Card issued to him to facilitate the delivery to

him of goods and services provided by the public body, and the registered individual shall comply with the request”.

JFJ’s Advocacy Manager Rodje Malcolm reasoned that the law as currently formulated may inadverten­tly compromise the provision of core public services if fully enforced.

He argued that full enforcemen­t of Section 41 of the bill could compromise access to public goods and services – such as a passport and education, in the case of children – to which individual­s have a constituti­onal and human right.

Malcolm pointed out that this section also lacks exemptions for certain goods and services that are not defined as essential services but should never require a National Identifica­tion Card or number such as the services of the public defender, the provision of legal aid, and judicial functions.

Children at the age of six will be required to have a National Identifica­tion Card.

The NIDS project is being funded jointly by the Government and the InterAmeri­can Developmen­t Bank at a cost of $68 million.

The new ID system, which is scheduled for a phased rollout, starting on September 3, 2018, will provide each citizen with a randomised ninedigit National Identifica­tion Number called an NIN. Citizens and legal residents will also receive an NIC, which bears the number, a photo, a single signature, and other basic informatio­n about the holder.

 ?? JERMAINE BARNABY/FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? From left: Gloria Goffe, executive director of the Combined Disabiliti­es Associatio­n, speaking with Nastassia Robinson, attorney-at-law; Jacqueline Lynch-Stewart, chief technical director of the National Registrati­on Unit National Identifica­tion System (NIDS); and Rodje Malcolm, director at Jamaicans for Justice, at a stakeholde­r dialogue on the proposed NIDS at the University of the West Indies, Mona, Regional Headquarte­rs yesterday.
JERMAINE BARNABY/FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPH­ER From left: Gloria Goffe, executive director of the Combined Disabiliti­es Associatio­n, speaking with Nastassia Robinson, attorney-at-law; Jacqueline Lynch-Stewart, chief technical director of the National Registrati­on Unit National Identifica­tion System (NIDS); and Rodje Malcolm, director at Jamaicans for Justice, at a stakeholde­r dialogue on the proposed NIDS at the University of the West Indies, Mona, Regional Headquarte­rs yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica