The Rural Development and Local Government Ministry is planning the operationalisation structure for the implementation of the Local Government Reform Bill which was passed in the Senate on Tuesday and it’s intended the reform bill will be operationalised “with immediacy.”
This is according to Rural Development and Local Government Minister Faris Al-Rawi.
The Miscellaneous Provisions (Local Government Reform) Bill was passed without amendments. It involved changes to laws used in Local Government operations.
The bill was passed by votes from 15 Government members and nine Independent senators. The Opposition abstained.
The same occurred when the bill was debated in the House of Representatives last month —passed with Government support, despite Opposition abstention.
Passage of the bill represented the fruition of years of the People’s National Movement’s (PNM’s) efforts on Local Government reform since the tenures of former Ministers Hazel Manning and the late Franklin Khan. The bill now has to be proclaimed.
It also provides for a role for the Finance Ministry to have oversight of certain aspects concerning corporations’ financial matters and in setting (with the Chief Personnel Officer) salaries and terms and conditions for officials.
Under the bill, councillors, mayors and aldermen will become full-time officials and the next set of such officials after the upcoming Local Government elections will be full-time.
The bill also included a provision for regional corporations to collect residential property tax and retain it for their operations.
The Ministry of Finance recently projected it will begin before December 31.
Some expect the start date to be in the 2023 Budget in October.
On Guardian Media queries on how long it will take for corporations to start using the bill’s provisions including the Finance Ministry setting terms for corporation officials, Al-Rawi said, “We are planning the operationalisation schedule.”
While the bill was passed without amendments, Independent Senator Amrita Deonarine had presented amendments to ensure corporations present accounts/audited statements on time.
In a recent debate, Independent Senator Charisse Seepersad and Deonarine expressed concern about corporations’ accountability, noting their years of late submission of financial accounts and statements.
They queried placing property taxes in corporations’ hands amid this.
At Tuesday’s final examinations of the bill, both reiterated their concerns. Deonarine said the most they could do at the level of Parliamentary financial committees to compel corporations to change the situation was to “get rough with them.” She initially declined to withdraw her amendments but did so after Al-Rawi pointed out the proposals would require “touching the Constitution” and he couldn’t change the bill as the Opposition wasn’t providing the necessary two-third vote support to change it.
He sought to give assurances on the situation where upcoming reform was involved. He said the process reform is afoot.
Al-Rawi said the Finance Minister had issued a circular demanding all statutory authorities and similar agencies submit audited and management accounts annually.
He said Deonarine’s concerns were shared by Government but it lacked Opposition support “to achieve the level of reform we want. You have all 15 votes on (Government side), nine in the Independents’ discretion and all UNC is saying ‘no,’ so we can only do what we can.”