Kejan Haynes
Former Public Administration Minister Allyson West has flatly denied claims that she presided over “ghost rentals,” calling the accusation the most egregious of several “misrepresentations and innuendos” made by Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar.
“I once again call for our public discourse to be grounded in fact, rather than misrepresentations and innuendo," she said in a statement.
She said discrepancies between the rental costs recorded by the Ministry of Finance and those on the Property Management Information System managed by her ministry had a simple explanation: the Ministry of Public Administration (MPA), through the Property and Real Estate Services Division (PRESD), handled commercial rentals for central government only.
“Many government entities outside of central government handle their own rentals, the details of which are not known to MPA or included on MPA’s records,” West said, citing statutory authorities like the Water and Sewerage Authority and the Regional Health Authorities. When these bodies request funding from the government, their rental costs appear in the Ministry of Finance’s figures—not in MPA’s.
West also took aim at Persad-Bissessar’s claim that the State was paying an average of $23 per square foot in rent in Port of Spain. “That is certainly not true of the properties falling under the remit of PRESD,” she said. “One of the first things I did on assuming office was to ensure that we identified the most expensive rentals and set about treating with those.”
She said PRESD was specifically mandated by Cabinet to bring Port of Spain rental rates down to $10 per square foot, a goal largely achieved. By the time she left office, monthly rental costs had dropped from $23 million to $17 million, with further savings in progress.
These included acquiring the TSTT Laventille property to house police offices and save $1 million monthly, consolidating services in Point Fortin at the Heritage Admin Centre, and transferring the Prime Minister’s Tobago office from a private to a state-owned building. Plans were also underway for a centralised government records facility and shared tribunal centre to reduce property footprints and costs.
West acknowledged that maintenance remained a weakness in the public sector but said rental agreements clearly defined responsibilities, and PRESD worked to ensure landlords upheld their obligations.
She also pushed back on the narrative that the Rowley administration had no vision for decentralisation. While not relocating ministries from the capital, she said their focus was to “bring services closer to the people” through digital transformation and the creation of full-service administrative centres across the country.