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Sunday, May 25, 2025

Public could face ‘squeeze’ as corporations’ funding cut

by

235 days ago
20241002
Chairman of the Princes Town Regional Corporation  Gowrie Roopnarine

Chairman of the Princes Town Regional Corporation  Gowrie Roopnarine

Gail Alexan­der

Se­nior Po­lit­i­cal Re­porter

Re­duced de­vel­op­ment fund­ing al­lo­cat­ed to re­gion­al cor­po­ra­tions in the 2025 bud­get could put the “squeeze” on the pub­lic, ac­cord­ing to Gowrie Roop­nar­ine, chair­man of the Princes Town cor­po­ra­tion.

“The re­duced de­vel­op­ment fund­ing in this so-called ‘elec­tion bud­get’ will just in­di­rect­ly squeeze peo­ple—not ‘sweet­en’ them up,” Roop­nar­ine added yes­ter­day, fol­low­ing Mon­day’s un­veil­ing of the 2025 Bud­get.

Ac­com­pa­ny­ing bud­get doc­u­ments for de­vel­op­ment showed fig­ures that cor­po­ra­tions re­ceived for this as­pect of op­er­a­tions. Fund­ing was re­duced from the 2024 de­vel­op­ment fund­ing fig­ures—be­tween ap­prox­i­mate­ly $5 mil­lion and $1 mil­lion in some cas­es.

The de­vel­op­ment fund­ing for 2025 is as fol­lows: Port-of-Spain cor­po­ra­tion ($19.8 mil­lion); Ari­ma ($18.3 mil­lion); San Fer­nan­do cor­po­ra­tion ($20.1 mil­lion); Point Fortin ($17.7 mil­lion); Ch­agua­nas ($17.3 mil­lion); Diego Mar­tin bor­ough ($17.5 mil­lion); San Juan/Laven­tille cor­po­ra­tion ($17.2 mil­lion); Tu­na­puna/Pi­ar­co cor­po­ra­tion ($18.2 mil­lion); San­gre Grande ($17.8 mil­lion); Cou­va/Tabaquite/Tal­paro ($17.2 mil­lion); Ma­yaro/Rio Claro cor­po­ra­tion ($17.3 mil­lion); Siparia bor­ough ($17.4 mil­lion); Pe­nal Debe cor­po­ra­tion ($17.2 mil­lion); Princes Town ($17.4 mil­lion).

An­oth­er al­lo­ca­tion that the cor­po­ra­tions al­so re­ceived for re­cur­rent ex­pen­di­ture (to pay staff and oth­er com­mit­ments) ranged from a max­i­mum of $230.6 mil­lion (PoS cor­po­ra­tion) to a min­i­mum of $61.1 mil­lion (Ma­yaro/Rio Claro cor­po­ra­tion).

Roop­nar­ine said, “Our de­vel­op­ment fund­ing in Princes Town was cut by about $3.4 mil­lion com­pared to 2024 fund­ing. It will be tough go­ing in 2025 as the de­vel­op­ment fund, which we all use to fund work to be done, has been re­duced for all cor­po­ra­tions.”

“Oth­er cor­po­ra­tions got less de­vel­op­ment fund­ing than us. While some got small­er ‘cuts’ than we did, oth­ers may be in prob­lems al­so.

“We in Princes Town can­not use the $74.4 mil­lion in re­cur­rent fund­ing that we got to do de­vel­op­ment work, as that is to pay staff and oth­er oblig­a­tions the cor­po­ra­tions must ful­fil to keep run­ning. We’ll al­so have to use the in­com­ing de­vel­op­ment funds to pay for projects that weren’t com­plet­ed in the last year. We couldn’t pay for that, since it was due to the min­istry’s late ap­proach,” Roop­nar­ine added.

“At the end of the day, we might end up with about $7 mil­lion to do projects for 2025, and that could ham­per ser­vice to burgess­es.”

Roop­nar­ine said the Gov­ern­ment’s plan to hand over prop­er­ty tax to cor­po­ra­tions would not help, since he said his cor­po­ra­tion re­ceived Fi­nance Min­istry word that the area may get about $7.3 mil­lion.

He said the Princes Town cor­po­ra­tion’s al­lo­ca­tion did not in­clude any­thing for Lo­cal Gov­ern­ment re­form ei­ther.

Lo­cal Gov­ern­ment Min­istry of­fi­cials said more in­for­ma­tion would emerge in the bud­get de­bate.

How­ev­er, they not­ed that the prop­er­ty tax in­come would be passed to cor­po­ra­tions to un­der­take their work, and it would be up to them to man­age for their burgess­es’ ben­e­fit.

They not­ed T&T’s cir­cum­stances and the fact that the 2025 bud­get had to be al­most the same size ($59 bil­lion) as the 2024 bud­get but added that the bud­get pre­sent­ed on Mon­day had de­tailed sound ways in which T&T could sur­vive the sit­u­a­tion un­til gas re­serves im­proved in 2027, “... If we all make the ef­fort and do the best we can with what we have ... and the cor­po­ra­tions all know how to man­age.”

The min­istry has $14 mil­lion in de­vel­op­ment fund­ing for im­ple­ment­ing Lo­cal Gov­ern­ment re­form and $5.466 mil­lion in re­cur­rent ex­pen­di­ture for CEPEP (de­creased from 2024).

The min­istry al­so has $5 mil­lion each for the restora­tion of lo­cal roads, bridges, and land­slips and a $3 mil­lion drainage restora­tion plan, as well as a new item—a $500,000 mu­nic­i­pal flood mit­i­ga­tion pro­gramme. 


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