Attorney General Anand Ramlogan did the right thing when he announced at Thursday's post-Cabinet news conference that the tendering process for National Petroleum's (NP) $40 million transport contract should be quashed and the bidding process reopened. The entire procurement process was thrown into doubt when a Port-of-Spain attorney filed a pre-action protocol letter-on behalf of CDS Transport, the company that had held the transportation contract for ten years-challenging the selection of Gopaul and Company.
It later emerged that Gopaul and Company was run by friends of Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, who had offered her the run of their Tunapuna home in the immediate aftermath of the May 2010 general election. As the Attorney General made clear last week, when he read excerpts from four legal opinions he had received on the matter, the attempt by some to link Mrs Persad-Bissessar's stay at the Gopauls' home with the selection of their company as the preferred bidder was absurd. T&T needs to get to the stage where the procurement of government contracts goes to the best candidate based on their ability to do the best job at the lowest price. Whether the owner of a firm bidding for a contract is the best friend of the Prime Minister should neither help nor hinder the procurement process.
For state-owned companies and for Government contracts, the procurement process must be completely blind, but not dumb.
On the issue of the procurement process, we note once again that one of the principle promises made by the People's Partnership during the general election campaign last year was the regularisation of procurement procedures to emphasise the tenets of transparency, accountability and value for money.
We urge the administration to remove the proposals for the overhaul of the procurement procedures in the public service from the backburner where they have been languishing and start the cooking of this all-important legislative reform. In that regard, we salute the public-spirited intervention of civil society-in the form of the T&T Manufacturers' Association, the T&T Transparency Institute, the Chamber of Industry and Commerce and the Joint Consultative Council for the construction industry-which have lobbied for procurement reform.
Having advised that the process of tendering for the transport contract at NP should be restarted, the Attorney General needs to go one step further and take a personal interest in ensuring that the process that is used in the new tender is beyond reproach and the people chosen to do the evaluation are completely different to those who performed the last evaluation. The Attorney General found that there was some inconsistency in the report of the evaluation committee. "It was impossible to reconcile or rationalise the score given to CDS with the comments that they made." The Government also needs to answer the question as to whether the outsourcing of the transportation is the optimum use of NP's financial and other resources.
At a recent public meeting, Opposition Leader Keith Rowley charged that a technical study by the state-owned retailer of fuels had determined that it would be more economical for NP to purchase trucks to transport gas than to continue leasing the trucks.If that was indeed the technical advice that NP had received, the company does indeed need to explain why it decided to scrap the proposal to do transportation as an in-house activity rather than outsource it.