The long and tedious lines at Government offices to apply for documents such as birth papers and driver’s permits can be avoided if the State has the will power to adopt a more technological approach to governance.
This according to Caribbean Telecommunications Union (CTU) president Melford Nicholas at a press conference during the CTU’s FutureScape celebration for their 30th anniversary yesterday.
Nicholas is also the Minister of Information, Broadcasting, Telecommunications & Information Technology in Antigua and Barbuda.
In the current technological age, many of these tedious tasks can simply be done at the push of a button or from the comfort of your home. However, these systems are not being used to their full potential in the region.
Nicholas believes such technological approaches to governance is long overdue.
“We have fallen behind in the rest of the global commerce…We can no longer continue with the old system of government with the old slow bureaucratic processes. The need is there.”
He said money is not the only limitation to implementing these changes as some governments lack the willpower to do so.
“It comes down to the will of the heads of government. If it is their will that it happens, it will happen,” he said.
He cited a recent project undertaken by his government to provide digital Identification Cards to citizens. Despite requiring the entry of decades of information into a database, the project only cost them some $1.5 million US.
However, when incorporating technology into governance, Guyana’s Minister of Public information Catherine Hughes cautioned, cultural aversions must be taken into consideration.
She said in her country, citizens were outraged when a telephone company announced they were going to stop sending out hard copies of bills, replacing them with digital copies.
A similar scenario occurred in T&T recently when the Piarco International Airport switched to an electronic payment system for their car park.
For the past three days, the CTU has been celebrating their 30th anniversary with an event called FutureScape under the theme “Digital Transition: Do It.”
The event immersed stakeholders from across the region in a real-time technology experience, which demonstrated the efficiency, transparency and convenience of a fully integrated Caribbean.
It also involved heads of government and officials from across the region engaged in discussions towards this goal.
Secretary General of the CTU, Bernadette Lewis said it was done to foster collaboration.
“What we are trying to achieve requires meaningful collaboration by the Prime Ministers, heads of government, they have to champion that cause. They have to champion that cause of 21st-century governance.”
Nicholas also said much of what was seen at the event can be implemented within the next two years in CTU member countries if the right approach is taken by respective governments.