JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Friday, March 21, 2025

China Jiangsu ordered to pay HDC $30M in Las Alturas fiasco

by

677 days ago
20230514
Las Alturas apartment building.

Las Alturas apartment building.

Se­nior Mul­ti­me­dia Jour­nal­ist

joshua.seemu­n­gal@guardian.co.tt

Con­struc­tion com­pa­ny Chi­na Jiang­su In­ter­na­tion­al Cor­po­ra­tion Trinidad and To­ba­go Lim­it­ed has been or­dered by the High Court to pay the Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion (HDC) more than $30 mil­lion in dam­ages re­lat­ed to the con­tro­ver­sial HDC Las Al­turas Project.

Chi­na Jiang­su was award­ed a con­tract of $67.62 mil­lion by UDE­COTT in 2003 to con­struct 297 apart­ments which start­ed in 2004 along La­dy Young Road.  When UDE­COTT re­fo­cused on non-res­i­den­tial de­vel­op­ment, that con­tract was trans­ferred to the HDC in 2006.

The case dealt specif­i­cal­ly with the struc­tur­al dam­age to build­ing blocks ‘H’ and ‘I’ of the project. That phase of the project start­ed in 2008 and end­ed in 2010. As a re­sult of land slip­page that dam­aged the struc­ture of the blocks, the build­ings that cost around $26 mil­lion to con­struct were even­tu­al­ly de­mol­ished in 2012 at a fur­ther cost of $3.3 mil­lion.

The judg­ment comes more than sev­en years af­ter the HDC filed a claim for dam­ages for breach of con­tract and neg­li­gence con­cern­ing the con­struc­tion of apart­ment and town­house units lo­cat­ed at Stephenville Road, Mor­vant.

On April 19, High Court Judge David Har­ris ruled that Chi­na Jiang­su In­ter­na­tion­al T&T must pay HDC $26 mil­lion, rep­re­sent­ing wast­ed ex­pen­di­ture on blocks ‘H’ and ‘I’—specif­i­cal­ly, pay­ments made to Chi­na Jiang­su; $3 mil­lion for the cost of car­ry­ing out site in­struc­tion 73 to de­mol­ish and make good blocks ‘H’ and ‘I’ of the project; $500,000 rep­re­sent­ing the in­stal­la­tion by Trin­to­plan of three piezome­ters and six in­cli­nome­ters; $110,000 rep­re­sent­ing hoard­ing off-site; US$55,000 rep­re­sent­ing con­sul­tan­cy fee paid to Mueser Rut­ledge; $36,041 rep­re­sent­ing the as­sess­ment of blocks ‘H’ and ‘I’ by Trin­to­plan; and an­oth­er $22,943 for oth­er ser­vices.

The agree­ment be­tween the par­ties to con­struct 90 apart­ment units and 44 town­house units was signed in Jan­u­ary 2008.

Be­fore the Las Al­turas deal, Chi­na Jiang­su had con­struct­ed an­oth­er five hous­ing projects for the HDC.

Chi­na Jiang­su In­ter­na­tion­al was al­so the con­trac­tor for the Tamana In­Tech Park project. The project, ini­tial­ly es­ti­mat­ed to cost $1.1 bil­lion, sky­rock­et­ed to $1.8 bil­lion due to cost over­runs and vari­a­tions from the blue­print. The project was sched­uled to be com­plet­ed in 2010 but did not fin­ish un­til 2014.

At a point in time, how­ev­er, Chi­na Jiang­su was owed $35 mil­lion for project vari­a­tions.

“What re­al­ly stalled the project was the fact that the pre­vi­ous ad­min­is­tra­tion had vari­a­tions with the scope of work, which was not prop­er­ly doc­u­ment­ed. They de­vi­at­ed from the blue­print, which led to cost over­runs. An­oth­er set­back was a re­sult of lit­i­ga­tion from en­gi­neer­ing con­sul­tants and ar­chi­tects. We’ve had a sit­u­a­tion where some of them have sued be­cause of the de­lays in the project,” for­mer UTT chair­man Cur­tis Man­choon said about the project while con­struc­tion was on­go­ing.

Chi­na Jiang­su In­ter­na­tion­al al­so lat­er re­ceived a $0.5 bil­lion con­tract to con­struct the Uni­ver­si­ty of the West In­dies South Cam­pus in Debe/Pe­nal in 2012, de­spite the fact that HDC was aware since 2011 that these two brand-new apart­ment build­ings had to be de­mol­ished.

“This speaks to the dan­ger of a siloed ap­proach to na­tion­al de­vel­op­ment, which the new Pub­lic Pro­cure­ment law will rec­ti­fy,” said char­tered sur­vey­or and for­mer pres­i­dent of the Joint Con­sul­ta­tive Coun­cil (JCC) for the Con­struc­tion In­dus­try Afra Ray­mond.

For­mer pres­i­dent of the Trinidad and To­ba­go Con­trac­tors As­so­ci­a­tion (TTCA) Mikey Joseph had said it was “sur­pris­ing” and “ap­palling” that the Uni­ver­si­ty of the West In­dies (UWI) lat­er ap­proved a $509.4 mil­lion con­tract to build the South cam­pus to a Chi­nese com­pa­ny with a poor track record.

A source of po­lit­i­cal de­bate with­in the PNM

The failed Las Al­turas Hous­ing con­struc­tion project was a source of much po­lit­i­cal de­bate with­in the Peo­ple’s Na­tion­al Move­ment (PNM) gov­ern­ment at the time, with un­con­firmed ru­mours that it led to dis­agree­ments be­tween then prime min­is­ter Patrick Man­ning and then hous­ing min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley.

An­dre Mon­teil was the chair­man of the HDC at the time, and Faris Al-Rawi was a di­rec­tor of the HDC.

It was al­so a source of a bit­ter dis­pute be­tween the PNM and the Unit­ed Na­tion­al Con­gress. Dur­ing the Peo­ple’s Part­ner­ship gov­ern­ment’s tenure, a Com­mis­sion of En­quiry in­to the project was com­mis­sioned in 2014.

“So where did that mon­ey go? We have to an­swer that ques­tion,” then prime min­is­ter Kam­la Per­sad-Bisses­sar said.

“Should the pub­lic to­day do as the PNM did and sweep this mat­ter un­der the car­pet? Should these high-pro­file PNM mem­bers not be able to ex­plain what hap­pened un­der their watch?”

In Sep­tem­ber 2016, the com­mis­sion’s re­port found that there were no grounds for crim­i­nal pro­ceed­ings, but rec­om­mend­ed civ­il ac­tion be tak­en against for­mer UDE­COTT Chair­man Calder Hart, Noel Gar­cia, UDE­COTT and HDC for neg­li­gence.

Fol­low­ing the re­lease of the re­port’s find­ings, Hart and Gar­cia took le­gal ac­tion. They claimed they were not in­formed of the ad­verse find­ings of the re­port and thus, did not get an op­por­tu­ni­ty to re­spond to the claims be­fore its pub­li­ca­tion. Gar­cia lat­er suc­ceed­ed in his le­gal chal­lenge against the com­mis­sion­ers of the Las Al­turas in­quiry as the High Court quashed the find­ings against him.

Chi­na Jiang­su al­so threat­ened le­gal ac­tion if it was not re­moved as a par­ty in the com­mis­sion.

Ac­cord­ing to Prime Min­is­ter Row­ley in 2016, the in­quiry that cost more than $24 mil­lion was a po­lit­i­cal witch-hunt doomed to fail. “The Gov­ern­ment had the re­quire­ment to go af­ter the con­trac­tor flat­ly and de­lib­er­ate­ly re­fused to do so. To add in­sult to in­jury, the same con­trac­tor failed to ap­pear be­fore the Com­mis­sion­er of En­quiry be­cause he was too busy build­ing in the new con­tract that was giv­en to them by the said gov­ern­ment in this mat­ter,” he ac­cused.

Afra Raymond

Afra Raymond

ABRAHAM DIAZ

Ray­mond: We need to en­sure Chi­na Jiang­su ac­tu­al­ly pays dam­ages

Ac­cord­ing to Afra Ray­mond, the judg­ment seems to be fair, as it was a de­sign-build con­tract in which the con­trac­tor is re­spon­si­ble for its sub­con­trac­tors and con­sul­tants as part of the ‘sin­gle point of re­spon­si­bil­i­ty prin­ci­ple.’

He did, how­ev­er, sug­gest the rul­ing, which took sev­en years, was too long.  “This case is al­so sig­nif­i­cant since ours is a Black coun­try which has tak­en prop­er steps to de­fend its pat­ri­mo­ny against multi­na­tion­al con­trac­tors, Chi­nese in this case. That is some­thing sel­dom seen, so we need to reg­is­ter the episode.

“We now need to be vig­i­lant to en­sure that Chi­na Jiang­su, rep­re­sent­ed by for­mer PNM AG John Je­re­mie SC, ac­tu­al­ly pays the dam­ages award­ed by the High Court, amount­ing to $30 M.”

Ray­mond said the un­der­ly­ing les­son of the Las Al­turas mat­ter was that the Hous­ing De­vel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion’s mas­sive pro­gramme en­gen­ders a deep­er set of con­flicts.

“The de­mand of those on the wait­ing list for hous­ing in ur­ban lo­ca­tions can push the pro­gramme in­to cost­ly projects on sites which have re­mained un­de­vel­oped, for what­ev­er rea­son. In this case, an un­suit­able site was used for a high-den­si­ty, hill­side hous­ing de­vel­op­ment and those con­flicts seed­ed these dif­fi­cul­ties,” he said.

He al­so ref­er­enced two pre­vi­ous projects in­volv­ing Chi­na Jiang­su In­ter­na­tion­al, say­ing that they were the con­trac­tors for ‘the long-de­layed UWI Debe Project and UTT Tamana.’ The JCC head­ed by Ray­mond had stat­ed its con­cerns about the Debe project in a  let­ter of May 18, 2012, to then UWI prin­ci­pal Prof Clement Sankat.

Fazir Khan

Fazir Khan

COURTESY FAZIR KHAN


JCC head: We need to work out mech­a­nisms to dereg­is­ter con­trac­tors guilty of neg­li­gence

Pres­i­dent of the Joint Con­sul­ta­tive Coun­cil (JCC) for the Con­struc­tion In­dus­try Fazir Khan be­lieves that a re­peat of such an in­stance as Las Al­turas can on­ly be avoid­ed by ex­treme due dili­gence by em­ploy­ers, con­sul­tants, and con­trac­tors.

He was con­fi­dent that the Com­mis­sion of En­quiry in­to Las Al­turas high­light­ed the project’s is­sues, and lessons were learned with­in the con­struc­tion in­dus­try. How­ev­er, he be­lieved the in­dus­try still needs to work out mech­a­nisms by which con­trac­tors who have clear­ly been guilty of neg­li­gence are dereg­is­tered.

“There are pro­ce­dures in the pro­cure­ment leg­is­la­tion for this but some in­ter­pre­ta­tion may be re­quired by the Of­fice of the Pro­cure­ment Reg­u­la­tor,” Khan said.

“Pro­cure­ment leg­is­la­tion is there to ad­dress mat­ters of trans­paren­cy and val­ue for pub­lic mon­ey dur­ing the pro­cure­ment process up to and in­clud­ing the award of con­tract. What hap­pens in the post-con­tract pe­ri­od like in Las Al­turas does not fall un­der the purview of the new leg­is­la­tion save and ex­cept for some lim­it­ed as­pects of per­for­mance and main­tains of con­trac­tor reg­is­tra­tion.”

Time­line of the project

• In De­cem­ber 2002, UDE­COTT ac­quired the Las Al­turas site.

• ↓In 2003, UDE­COTT, then led by Calder Hart, award­ed a $67.62 mil­lion con­tract to Chi­na Jiang­su In­ter­na­tion­al Cor­po­ra­tion for the con­struc­tion of 297 apart­ments in Mora­vant–the Las Al­turas Project.

• ↓In March 2005, a let­ter was al­leged­ly sent from UDE­COTT’s chief con­struc­tion en­gi­neer in­di­cat­ing that there was sig­nif­i­cant move­ment of the low­er slope of the site where blocks F, G, H and J were lo­cat­ed. Geo Tech As­so­ciates, which was a for­mer par­ty in HDC’s civ­il case, was hired by HDC to pro­vide ge­ot­ech­ni­cal in­for­ma­tion on the site cho­sen. In 2007, Chi­na Jiang­su was award­ed a two-year con­tract of $74.87 mil­lion for 134 units in 20 build­ings. In Jan­u­ary 2008, the sec­ond phase of the project was signed be­tween HDC and Chi­na Jiang­su. Lat­er that year, Ge­ot­ech As­so­ciates pre­pared a sub­soil in­ves­ti­ga­tion re­port for Build­ings H, I and J.                          

• ↓Con­struc­tion work on Build­ings H and I be­gan in De­cem­ber 2008, but less than a year lat­er, dam­age on the ground floor of Build­ing H was ob­served. In Jan­u­ary 2010, build­ings H and I were com­plet­ed.

• ↓How­ev­er, a sub­se­quent re­port by Ge­ot­ech de­ter­mined that there was land slip­page. Civ­il En­gi­neer­ing Man­age­ment and Ser­vices then rec­om­mend­ed that build­ings H and I be de­mol­ished to re­lieve stress on the struc­ture. En­gi­neer­ing con­sul­tants Trin­to­plan Con­sults Ltd al­so found that build­ings H had to be de­mol­ished while build­ing I would al­so like­ly have to be de­mol­ished. In the end, there were more than 100 apart­ment units that were paid for but nev­er com­plet­ed.

HDCMinistry of HousingInstagram


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored