Former housing minister Camille Robinson-Regis is accusing Housing Minister David Lee of failing to exercise proper oversight over his ministry, following fresh controversy surrounding the Housing Development Corporation’s suspended $3.4 billion housing programme.
In a media release issued today, Robinson-Regis criticised Lee after he distanced himself from a Sunday Express report alleging that “compensation” was offered to a reporter in an attempt to kill a story linked to the HDC contracts now under scrutiny, saying he didn't know anything about what was reported.
Robinson-Regis described the minister’s response as another instance of “I don’t know”, arguing that it reflected a troubling lack of awareness about developments within his ministry.
“Unfortunately, this is not an isolated incident,” she said.
She pointed to a series of controversies in the housing sector over recent months, including concerns surrounding HDC housing allocations, delayed housing projects, questions over the number of completed homes, inheritance taxes on HDC properties, increases in unit prices from $500,000 to $750,000, the replacement of approved applicants, and the regularisation of squatters occupying HDC units.
Robinson-Regis also referenced concerns over the suspended Design-Build-Finance procurement arrangements valued at $3.4 billion, which are now under investigation by the Office of Procurement Regulation.
Joining the criticism was Opposition MP Marvin Gonzales, who questioned Lee’s awareness of decisions being made within the housing sector.
In a statement posted on social media, Gonzales claimed the HDC board had fired employees, regularised illegal occupants of HDC homes, imposed transfer fees on HDC customers without Cabinet approval, and awarded multi-billion-dollar contracts to contractors with “no proven record in building not even an ajoupa”.
Gonzales also referenced allegations that bribes were offered to the Sunday Express to suppress reporting on the contracts controversy.
“All of this and David Lee knows nothing while he earns almost $60k monthly salary,” Gonzales wrote.
Robinson-Regis argued that Lee could not separate himself from responsibility for the ministry’s operations.
“A Minister is not a spectator. He is not an observer commenting from the sidelines. He is constitutionally and politically responsible for the Ministry under his charge,” Robinson-Regis said.
Citing Section 79 of the Constitution, she said ministers are responsible for exercising “general direction and control” over their ministries and must answer to Parliament and the public for their departments’ activities.
Robinson-Regis questioned who was making decisions within the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development if the minister remained unaware of key developments.
“If Minister Lee genuinely does not know what is happening in his Ministry, then the country must ask a far more alarming question: Who exactly is running the housing sector of Trinidad and Tobago?” she asked.
She also referenced allegations of “a serious coverup, possible bribery and corruption and other irregular actions” linked to the HDC matter.
“If the Minister cannot do the job, then he needs to do the honourable thing and just resign,” Robinson-Regis said.
