Senior Reporter
kay-marie.fletcher@guardian.co.tt
A Secondary Roads Rehabilitation and Improvement Company (SRRIC) official claims the company is being unfairly treated by the Ministry of Works and Transport (MOWT).
The state-owned enterprise, which is responsible for transforming secondary road infrastructure, will mark its second anniversary on June 17.
However, CEO Antonio Ross yesterday told the Public Administration and Appropriation Committee (PAAC) they are owed the initial $100 million promised by the state in 2022 and another $50 million from last year’s budget.
He also complained that other state agencies, including the MOWT’s Programme for Upgrading Roads Efficiency (PURE) Unit, are being favoured over them.
Ross said before the establishment of SRRIC, PURE took care of all secondary roads vested under the 14 municipal corporations. He said having both entities under the same umbrella is causing conflict. He also said the SRRIC’s office is not big enough to store important paperwork. If a family has a child and suddenly the husband brings the outside child into that family, will the outside child be treated the same way as the sibling who was always there? And I’m referring to PURE,” he said.
“You took another company that has a specific mandate and put it next to one under the same umbrella, in the same household as one that was already fulfilling the same mandate. ... So, it’s been a difficult process to be quite honest.”
However, MOWT Permanent Secretary Sonia Francis-Yearwood denied the CEO’s claims of inequality. She said the processes laid out for all agencies are the same. Francis-Yearwood could not provide a date when SRRIC would be paid what was owed but reminded the PAAC that funding came from the Finance Ministry. She said to move forward, SRRIC must comply with the MOWT’s processes.
“There is no need for statements about there’s this view of being some outside or stepchild, et cetera. It’s challenging to understand where that has come from. Perception is really an interesting thing. The processes that the Ministry of Works and Transport has laid out for the Secondary Rehabilitation Roads Company are the same processes that we have laid out for all the entities under the Ministry of Works and Transport. That includes the 13 other bodies under the ministry,” she said.
“It is not the intention of the ministry to keep back the work of the company. The added compacity in terms of road building and road maintenance is welcomed. There is enough to be done, but it must be done following proper procedures. At the end of the day, it is state funds, it is funding that is coming from the government’s purse, so there is a process, a procedure. If it is not followed, there is redress. You can approach the Ministry of Finance.”
However, Ross said the impression that the SRRIC did not comply with the ministry was false.