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Catherine Hughes

October 19,2017

Source

Though questions have been raised about the monitoring of laptops distributed under the scrapped One Laptop Per Family (OLPF) project, Minister of Public Telecommunications Cathy Hughes says that there is nothing government can do, given that the initiative came to an end under the PPP/C administration.

“There were no records [or] documents. The project was not handed over to us at all. We might be able to find records somewhere but there was no handing over of the project and it was dismantled under the PPP,” Hughes told Stabroek News recently.

Billions of dollars were spent on purchasing the computers, with the aim of making communities across the country more technologically savvy. However, from the inception problems were unearthed and many were later detailed in an audit of the project that was undertaken under the APNU+AFC government.

Hughes, while stressing that the PPP/C government left no mechanism in place to follow up with the project, said that the focus of the present administration has been on laptops for teachers as well as internet for communities through Information Communication Technology (ICT) hubs and in schools. The teacher project was first announced in August, 2015.

Gillian Burton-Persaud

Hughes made it clear that with the limited resources and people at her disposal, monitoring the laptops procured under the OLPF project is impossible. “I just don’t have the resources and, in my estimation, I prefer to use the resources that I have to do those two areas that I mentioned–internet for the schools, connectivity to hinterland areas–and so I would not be comfortable saying to my team, ‘No, don’t do that and for the next three months find the records and call everybody and see what going on,’” she said, while adding that it would be unreasonable to ask that a policy change be made and for her staff to follow up on a project that wasn’t handed over to the government.

According to the audit report, which was released in May, last year, the project fell short of its objective, was “grossly overstaffed” and the $4.3 billion spent on it could have been reduced.

The OLPF project was launched by the PPP/C government in 2011, with the main objective being to acquire and distribute laptops to 90,000 families countrywide. The report said up to December 31, 2014, the project had fallen short of the target by 31,697 or 35%. It said that the project only acquired 55,145 laptops, of which, 50,009 were distributed.

The cost of the 55,145 laptops was $3.1 billion, while other costs from May 9, 2011 to May 31, 2015 amounted to $1.2 billion.

The OLPF project was part of a larger ICT project funded by a loan and grants from the Govern-ment of China amounting to $10.2 billion, and from the Government of Guyana, which had put in $3.4 billion.

According to the audit report, the OLPF project was not governed by any specific legislation and the then project manager Margot Boyce was unable to provide auditors with a project document or plan detailing the number of laptops required for the project, the procurement stages and prospective suppliers of the laptops, procedures for distribution and the number of departments and employees required to effectively and efficiently execute the project.

The report also revealed that the OLPF’s obligation to provide 10 hours of training to all laptop recipients was scrapped on the ground that training was too expensive. It was stated that it was Boyce who decided to cease the training aspect of the project during the last quarter of 2013. “Our rough estimate is that some 14,138 laptops were distributed without the requisite training,” the report said. It added that over 5,000 laptops from the project, costing more than $300 million, were either stolen or were found to be defective.

Bad move

PPP/C Member of Parliament (MP) Gillian Burton-Persaud, who had served as a manager for the project, insists that the present government could have expanded on the project. She said that because of the large amount of money spent, every effort should have been made to salvage it.

Burton-Persaud, who has repeatedly referred to the project during debates in the National Assembly, noted that the laptops were given out with the specific goal of bridging the digital divide by allowing access to internet facilities by both the young and old.

Burton-Persaud recalled that the project was scrapped around June, 2015. “We were told that there would no longer be a need for staff there and so many persons were sent off. There were some persons who were kept under the guise that they would have been the rollover staff…,” she said.

On July 23, 2015, some 40 employees, including management, were given dismissal letters. One source had said that none of the employees was given any warning or had any inclination that they would be fired in such a brusque manner.

“It was a bit of the shocker to all the staff because you knew the importance of it, you knew where it was reaching and for somebody to just walk in one day and decide this is it, it left you to wonder how could an administration that is gonna talk about development and advancement of people scrap such an important project. It was really a shock,” Burton-Persaud noted.

“The cry about E-Governance is not taking shape the way it should because what should have really happened should have been a continuation of that initiative, regardless of which political, which leader started that programme because …it was very important, very critical to students, whether you be at primary, whether you at secondary, whether you be university. It put a very important education device into the hands of people,” she added.

“Looking at it from the outside, the programme was just scrapped and nothing more happened after that, so you are having thousands of laptops out there, you don’t know if it is working …how they are being utilised. You cannot measure the success of the initiative and that should not be because it was a national initiative. It was not an individual initiative or political. It was there to benefit all Guyanese,” she further said.

Burton-Persaud told Stabroek News that monitoring of the use of the devices since the APNU+AFC coalition took office would have clearly shown whether the initiative was successful or if more needed to be done to get it to that stage.

“Because just abandoning the idea and [them] still to come up with something to replace it…we heard about one laptop per teacher … [but] it is not transparent, so for me a very important initiative like One Laptop Per Family was blown away to the winds with callousness and no regards for what was being done and we can’t measure the outcome,” she stressed.

She maintained that government could have built on the existing project. “Continued monitoring and building on it, would have been the best thing to do,” she said.

According to her, some of the devices are still in use, as she has seen evidence of them being employed in a tangible way. She said that some young men are using it to bring in finances, such as by using them with their music sets.  She said that the laptops were to enhance communities, which is why hubs were being put in place. “If you didn’t have access to internet, you could have gone at a spot in your community, access free internet ….and use it effectively,” she said.

The PPP/C MP, told this newspaper that while it is possible for government to resuscitate the programme, tracking the laptops at this point would be “a humongous task” given the time that has passed. “They allowed a very, very good project that would have taken Guyana to another level as it relates to IT to go to waste. The reasons being I would really love to know,” she said, while adding that millions have been lost as a result.

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MPI restricts bidding pool for latest IDB-funded project

8
 

By Gary Eleazar

The Ministry of Public Infrastructure (MPI) is currently looking for contractors to undertake the upgrade of the Sheriff Street-Mandela Avenue roadway, but the bidding pool has been restricted.

Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo

The Ministry, in notices issued recently, is asking bidders to lodge up to $41 million in bid security before their proposals are even considered for evaluation.
According to the notices issued by the Ministry, the project is being undertaken in six lots.
Each bid must be accompanied by bid security. The rate set for lot six is US$200,000 (G$41.6 million). Lots one through three are set at a rate of US$50,000 (G$10.4 million). Lot four has been set at a rate of US$30,000 (G$6.2 million) while lot five has been earmarked at US$20,000 (G$4.1 million).
According to the notices issued by the Ministry, the project entails rehabilitative works.

Public Infrastructure Minister David Patterson

This means that contractors looking to submit a bid for evaluation to undertake works in lot six will firstly have to come up with $41.6 million in collateral before even being considered.
The procurement notice has been posted by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), the funding agency for the project.
Observers recently questioned what exactly the Administration was looking to construct, since half of the money that was made available for the project has already been diverted towards a housing drive.
The IDB had initially approved some US$66 million for the road upgrade project, but the coalition Government opted to divert US$30 million of that amount towards the Central Housing and Planning Authority (CH&PA) for works to be undertaken in Sophia.
The Sheriff Street-Mandela Avenue road upgrade project has been on the cards for a number of years – piloted by the previous Administration, but its scope was revised under the current Administration. Critics have also raised eyebrows at the level of the bid security being asked, and pointed to recent lamentations by Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo, who had alleged tampering with the procurement process in order to award contracts to favoured supporters.
The original Engineer’s Estimate had been set at US$36,377,564, but the procurement process was annulled on previous occasions.
Jagdeo recently sought to make a case against the Public Infrastructure Ministry and its regular annulment of contracts as proof of tampering with the procurement process.
Jagdeo, at the time, told reporters that the Ministry had adopted a strategy where it would advertise and invite persons to bid for projects, but at the last minute, would annul the process. The Ministry would then go on to negotiate a contract with a chosen ‘crony’, according to Jagdeo.
As he sought to outline the Administration’s penchant for annulling the process and then opting to negotiate with favoured contractors, the Opposition Leader said this did not obtain only in the case of the well-publicised feasibility report for the new Demerara River crossing.
The Opposition Leader at the time supplied media operatives with a paper trail for other contracts which clearly showed the Ministry annulling the process before going on to select favoured contractors.
According to Jagdeo, “they annul the bid process after they award the contract… another set of corruption in the same Ministry”.
He told media operatives that the Administration has developed a modus operandi where it has a penchant for annulling tenders “when the desired person doesn’t get the bid – win the bid – one of their cronies.”
Jagdeo recalled too that the same practice obtained by the David Patterson-run Ministry for the multibillion-dollar Sherriff Street upgrade.
The Opposition Leader told media operatives this practice was also employed by the Administration for a range of other projects, such as a recent award for a contract for a water treatment plant, and projects at the Guyana Power and Light Inc, among others.
With regard to the sudden cancellation of the vehicular overpass that was announced, Jagdeo suggested that none of the favoured bidders had been successful and this was why the project was scrapped and that it had nothing to do with the reasons offered.
The Ministry recently indicated that the land earmarked for the project had in fact been sold in a private arrangement.
“This is not an exhaustive list. It is just indicative of the corruption at the Ministry of the Public Infrastructure… the Ministry is spending money in a reckless way. It does not know what it is doing. It is corrupt to the core,” he said.
The Ministry recently came under fire also when social commentator and eminent Chartered Accountant, Christopher Ram questioned the rapid rate of expenditure by the Ministry at the end of the year – the very ministry that had barely managed to spend 28 per cent of its annual allocation 10 months into the year.
The scope of works for the Sheriff Street- Mandela Avenue road corridor includes asphaltic pavement, road safety, upgrading traffic intersection signals at each of the major road junctions, and traffic and drainage improvement works. There will also be structural works to bridges, culverts and other supporting infrastructure. Pavement works will include the construction of a two-lane roadway with a median partitioning the two lanes along Sheriff Street.
The first section of Mandela Avenue will involve expansion from a two-lane to a four-lane roadway with a median in the centre, while the second section will consist of three lanes.
The total length of roadway to be rehabilitated/constructed is seven kilometres and would involve road-widening, reconstruction of failed sections, and asphalt overlay.

FM

Why aren't these jackasses in power not jailing the PPP operatives who perpetrated the crimes on Guyana with the laptop fiasco? This was one of their promise, lilmohan was braying all day and night that he will jail ppp once he got into power. Now he is relegated to slop can boy, he seems not to have any power within the pnc/afc. 

FM
Drugb posted:

Why aren't these jackasses in power not jailing the PPP operatives who perpetrated the crimes on Guyana with the laptop fiasco? This was one of their promise, lilmohan was braying all day and night that he will jail ppp once he got into power. Now he is relegated to slop can boy, he seems not to have any power within the pnc/afc. 

Bhai,there is an conflict of interest with current head of the DPP.

Django
Django posted:
Drugb posted:

Why aren't these jackasses in power not jailing the PPP operatives who perpetrated the crimes on Guyana with the laptop fiasco? This was one of their promise, lilmohan was braying all day and night that he will jail ppp once he got into power. Now he is relegated to slop can boy, he seems not to have any power within the pnc/afc. 

Bhai,there is an conflict of interest with current head of the DPP.

What conflict of interest bai? The lady has character and morals. That more you can say about your PNC... Basil Williams.

 

FM
skeldon_man posted:
Django posted:
Drugb posted:

Why aren't these jackasses in power not jailing the PPP operatives who perpetrated the crimes on Guyana with the laptop fiasco? This was one of their promise, lilmohan was braying all day and night that he will jail ppp once he got into power. Now he is relegated to slop can boy, he seems not to have any power within the pnc/afc. 

Bhai,there is an conflict of interest with current head of the DPP.

What conflict of interest bai? The lady has character and morals. That more you can say about your PNC... Basil Williams.

 

US$500M GBTI probe… DPP lawyer’s contempt case “will be treated like all others”.

https://www.kaieteurnewsonline...ted-like-all-others/

Read this article,bhai.

Django

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