An overview of the Uff Report
Published Thursday April 8th, 2010
The Attorney General
announced at the Post Cabinet press briefing on Thursday 1st
April that the full Uff Commission Report will be laid in the Senate on
Tuesday 6th April – see
link.
I was pleased to hear that, but there remained a widespread attitude of
skepticism as to the outcome of the AG’s promise. One can hardly blame
people for having those feelings since, as TTTI’s President, Victor
Hart, has recently reminded us, PM Manning broke his promise to publish
the report of the Bernard Commission into the Piarco Airport project.
That was over 6 years ago and still no Bernard Report yet.
I received a copy of the
Uff Report in my email on Saturday and several other concerned citizens
as well, so it seems that some publicly-minded person wanted to ensure
that it was not either suppressed or edited. Thank you, whoever you
are.
The Uff Report is 512
pages long and contains 91 recommendations, so its sheer volume and the
limited time available mean that I am unable to give a detailed review.
This week’s column will therefore comprise an overview of the main
concerns raised in the Enquiry and the way in which the Report has
handled those.
CORRUPTION
Q -
Does corruption exist in the manner alleged by the government’s critics?
A – At
para 59. the Uff Report states that “…It is accepted that corruption
is a problem of serious proportions in Trinidad & Tobago…to which the
construction industry is particularly prone…”
Was
there actually something corrupt or wrong at UDeCOTT?
Q – Is
there good reason for concern at UDeCOTT’s operations, or is it a case
of politically-motivated attacks?
A –
Para 14.36, from the Commission’s discussion of the Ministry of Legal
Affairs Tower/CH contract, is a classic of understatement – “…UDeCOTT’s
application of its own rules discloses a worrying lack of transparency
as well as inconsistency…”
Para
14.37 states – “…the appearance of Mr. Calder Hart’s fax number on
the notepaper, which was no doubt hurriedly printed by CH Development,
remains unexplained…”
Para
14.42 – “their recommendations, that there should be an investigation
by an appropriate criminal law authority into the award of the MLA
contract to CH Development, to include the role of Mr Calder Hart and
the conduct of the Board in not ensuring that and enforceable guarantee
was given by the parent company of CH Development....”
“…
LOCAL VS FOREIGN
Q -
Are local contractors being unfairly replaced by foreign contractors or
do the foreigners really deliver better performance?
A –
Para 6.18 states that – “…no convincing comparison has yet been
presented from which reliable conclusions can be drawn as to the
relative performance of local and foreign contractors or consultants…”
PROCUREMENT
Q - Is
it better for the government to try using Design and Build or should
they stick with the traditional Design and Tender method of procurement?
A –
Para 7.20 states that – “…there is no single system of procurement
which should be preferred in all circumstances…”
The Hart legacy
12.55 – We have noted
above the apparent absence of any note of criticism or dissent within
the UdeCOTT staff and the dominant influence of the Executive Chairman,
Mr Calder Hart. To the extent that the failure of senior staff and
directors to raise any voice in opposition to the level of financial
irregularity found on the Brian Lara Project amounts to loyalty, such
loyalty is clearly misplaced.
The Property Matters
critique of UDeCOTT started in 2008 on the theme ‘A considerable
concentration of power’, which attempted to draw lessons from the
Cadbury Commission as to the perils of the Executive Chairman.
The role of UDeCOTT’s
Board and its Executive Chairman came in for heavy criticism, with the
Report calling for full investigations into the Ministry of Legal
Affairs Tower and the Brian Lara Cricket Academy. Furthermore, there is
a recommendation that the roles of Chairman and CEO should be separated.
The Rowley saga –
Q – Was there really any
money missing at Cleaver Heights?
A – Para 27.11 – “…the
entirely erroneous addition of $10,000,000…”
Notes to Jearlean
John
On Tuesday 16th
March, I spoke at a JCC press conference and took the opportunity to
issue two calls to Ms. Jearlean John – the MD of the Housing Development
Corporation and newly-appointed Chairwoman of UDeCOTT. See
link.
On the question of the
HDC’s fundamental role and its performance, I again raised the issue of
their output. In the course of the Enquiry and in this column, I have
pointed out the serious output shortfall of the HDC, the primary
function of which is contained in its name. Housing Development. At
the press conference I was openly skeptical about the often-repeated
figure of 26,000 new homes built by the HDC in the execution of the
present national housing policy (implemented in 2003) which set a target
of 100,000 new homes in a decade. I doubted that even half that amount
had actually been built and requested that Ms. John should publish a
list of where and how many new homes were completed. On Sunday 28th
March, this newspaper carried a two-page ‘Special Report’ on UNC claims
of voter-padding and that included the requested information. The
article was probing another aspect of the housing riddle, but the two
figures which struck me were ‘15,394 housing units constructed by the
government in 2003-2009’ and the table detailing the locations and unit
numbers with a closing total of 13,677 units. Either way, the total is
far less than that claimed thus far and using the upper figure equates
to an average of just about 2,200 new homes per year. That is a far cry
from the original annual target of 10,000 new homes and even the revised
target of 8,000. One can only wonder where the wrong, inflated figure
came from and, those having been fed into the budget process, how
accurate is our planning? It is all reminiscent of the outstanding
query from the Uff Commission as to the Cleaver Heights housing project
and the false claims as to missing money – Who told the PM that false
information for him to have made those baseless and misleading
statements to the Parliament? No one ever admitted to that in the
course of the Uff Commission.
Thank you for releasing
that info, Ms. John, even if it was in response to another call. Given
our persistent culture of secrecy, especially in public matters, it is a
welcome change.
My second call to Ms.
John at that press conference was to publish the UDeCOTT accounts
without further delay. As I put it – ‘Ms. John, if you want to be noted
for integrity and transparency, you must publish the UDeCOTT accounts
without delay. UDeCOTT has published no audited accounts since the end
of 2006 and I was pleased to see the Ms. John’s positive response to
those calls. See
link.
Ms. John was reported to
have been appointed and met with UDeCOTT’s Board on 25th
March – See
link.
That report in this newspaper concluded with a telling quote from the
Deputy Chairman – “Bahadoorsingh said John was an excellent chairman, “Highly
competent, very knowledgeable, no nonsense and to the point and very
friendly, a pleasure to work with. “It’s a new era with this new
chairman. I’m very impressed,”
We are waiting for
either the prompt publication of UDeCOTT’s Annual Report, accompanied by
audited accounts, or some cogent public explanation for the unacceptable
delay in so doing. For all this time to pass, with neither of those
events to taking place, can only deepen the atmosphere of distrust. We,
the taxpaying public, expect better from you, Ms. John.
Afra Raymond is Managing
Director of Raymond & Pierre Limited and President of the Institute of
Surveyors of Trinidad & Tobago. Comments can be sent to
afra@raymondandpierre.com. |