Senior Reporter
andrea.perez-sobers@guardian.co.tt
The Fair Trading Commission (FTC) and the Regulated Industries Commission (RIC) have been formally reconstituted, with instruments of appointment handed over by President Christine Kangaloo at President’s House, ending a 10-month gap without a functioning FTC board.
At the centre of the reset is Nisha Persad, who has been appointed chairman of both commissions in a move aimed at restoring oversight of competition policy and regulated sectors.
Speaking to the media after the ceremony yesterday, Persad made clear that her immediate priority is to operationalise both bodies.
“Well, of course, the first plan of action is to have a board meeting because this is the first time I’m meeting the members of the board. So we’re hoping to schedule that meeting for sometime next week. And we’re hoping as well to meet with the relevant ministers and line ministers so that we can properly follow the mandate that each commission has,” she said.
She also noted that holding both positions is not unprecedented and reflects the legislative framework governing the commissions.
“I don’t believe so, no. I think I can’t, it’s on the calendar, I think it was also RIC and FTC, if I remember correctly. Right. But I believe prior to that, the RIC Chairman was also the FTC Chairman. So it’s not irregular because a member of the RIC must be on the FTC,” Persad added.
The newly appointed FTC board comprises Tamara Dewan-Roopansingh, Barry Chin-Fatt, Johnathan Mark, and Patsy Ramharacksingh-Samaroo.
The RIC board includes Tamara Dewan-Roopansingh, Aruna Beharrylall, Neha Maharaj, and Genevieve Thompson.
Persad, a senior attorney-at-law at N.K Persad & Co in Port of Spain, holds a Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of London and a Legal Education Certificate from the Hugh Wooding Law School.
Her appointment follows legal pressure over the delay in constituting the FTC. A pre-action protocol letter from attorney Renuka Sagramsingh-Sooklal, acting for Wendell Eversley and led by Senior Counsel Stuart Young, threatened judicial review against the Ministry of Trade, Investment and Tourism.
The delay stalled key transactions, including Agostini Group Ltd’s proposed acquisition of Prestige Holdings Ltd, which has already secured 96.9 per cent shareholder approval but remains subject to regulatory clearance.
Prestige Holdings Group CEO Simon Hardy said he is hopeful the reconstituted commission will move the process forward.
“But I am hopeful that now that the FTC Commission and Board has been established, that at their, let’s say, leisure, but at their next order of business, they would be able to assess whatever it is they need to assess with the deal and pass a decision accordingly, which would then enable Agostini Group Ltd to pass the last hurdle,” Hardy said.
He said the company had already met the required shareholder threshold and was awaiting only regulatory approval to complete the transaction, adding that a timely determination would bring clarity to the market and allow the process to conclude without further delay or uncertainty for investors and stakeholders alike in the sector.
