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  • #16
    No retreat - Shaw continues to defend FINSAC spending
    Published: Wednesday | January 20, 2010


    Arthur Hall, Senior Staff Reporter
    Finance Minister Audley Shaw is not backing down from his defence of the Government's decision to spend $80 million on the Financial Sector Adjustment Company (FINSAC) Commission of Enquiry, even as more questions are asked about whether the money could not have been better spent.

    The questions come in the wake of the Government's decision last year to slash the amount initially allocated to most ministries in the wake of a major fallout in projected revenue, and to freeze public-sector salaries.

    Many ministries cut expenditure on key programmes; from the much-talked-about multibillion-dollar school-building programme to a few millions of dollars which were cut from the witness-protection programme.

    CDF cut in half

    Even the Government's marquee Constituency Development Fund allocated to the 60 members of parliament was cut in half, as the Golding administration told the country it had no choice.

    But that did not stop the spending on the commission of enquiry, and yesterday Shaw went on the offensive.

    Addressing a Jamaica Stock Exchange Forum in New Kingston, Shaw argued that the circumstances surrounding the financial sector meltdown in the 1990s and the subsequent $140-billion debt left by the FINSAC bailout was too grave for the country not to probe.

    "The Government will not resile from its commitment to put on record these events," Shaw said.

    "We are resolute that this must not happen again," added Shaw, as he argued that the money allocated for the FINSAC enquiry was always public, as it was included in his budget presentation last April.

    Let's go there

    The finance minister also charged that 10 years ago the People's National Party administration spent between $80 and $90 million for a Canadian firm to conduct a single forensic audit.

    "So if you want to go there, we will go there," Shaw declared, as he claimed that the FINSAC commission was coming under attack from persons who did not want the story to be told.

    But even as Shaw voiced his defence, callers to our news centre and radio talk shows expressed concern about the timing of the expenditure.

    Many argued that at this time the money could have been better spent in other critical areas.

    Checks by The Gleaner showed that several ministries and government entities lost more than $80 million from critical programmes in the revised budget tabled last September.

    These included the University of Technology, which lost the $80-million grant it had been allocated, the Office of the Prime Minister, Local Government division, which had $44 billion allocated to repair fire stations cut, and the Ministry of National Security, which lost $50 million allocated towards the construction of a well-needed public morgue for Kingston and St Andrew.


    BLACK LIVES MATTER

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    • #17
      JUSTICE CAREY OFFERS LITTLE ON MULTIMILLION-DOLLAR SALARY
      BY PATRICK FOSTER Observer writer fosterp@jamaicaobserver.com
      Wednesday, January 20, 2010
      RETIRED Justice Boyd Carey, chairman of the Finsac Enquiry, yesterday offered little regarding the revelation of the multimillion-dollar payments made to members of the Commission.
      On Monday, Radio Jamaica (RJR) reported that the budget to conduct the ongoing enquiry into the 1990s financial collapse was a whopping $80 million, including a $15-million payment for Carey.


      After adjourning yesterday's sitting where former Life of Jamaica head Danny Williams faced questions, Carey told journalists that he had nothing to do with the budget of the Commission.
      The retired justice said only that he was happy to know that he "could look forward to something". He then added that his payments were negotiated with the finance ministry.
      "I don't think I have any other comment to make," Carey declared, before he concluded the impromptu interview.
      Documents obtained by RJR under the Access to Information Act showed that other members of the Finsac Commission, Worrick Bogle and Charles Ross, are slated to earn $7.5 million each for their efforts.
      Carey is being paid at a daily rate of US$2,400 over a 70-day period while Ross and Bogle are being paid US$1,200 daily over the same period.
      Yesterday morning as the enquiry resumed, attorneys representing the Jamaica Redevelopment Foundation, former finance minister Dr Omar Davies and former Finsac head Patrick Hylton walked out of the sitting when Carey refused to allow them to make presentations.
      Carey responded to allegations of bias made by the attorneys via a letter to the governor general, copied to the prime minister and the minister of finance saying that the solicitor general had advised that there was no basis for the accusation.
      The chairman then told the attorneys that the issue was closed and the enquiry should continue.
      Insisting that they be heard, the attorneys then exited the sitting.
      In the meantime, the Jamaica Civil Service Association (JCSA) has knocked the Government for being insensitive in what it calls a "grand breach of faith" regarding the cost of the enquiry.
      "The rates being charged for the Finsac Enquiry are not only unbelievable but is a breach of faith by the Government with the people of Jamaica," JCSA president Wayne Jones said.
      He called for a review of the entire process of the enquiry, with a view to attaining a more realistic approach.
      Jones warned that if Government did not take steps to prevent recurrence of these kinds of decisions, then the union would find it difficult to continue providing the co-operation and understanding requested of workers.
      "Public sector workers, like tens of thousands of other workers have, over the past years, been subjected to wage freeze, wage compression, wage cuts, reduction in hours and have lost their jobs all in the name of economic crisis and the need for shared sacrifice," Jones said.
      "And as this is happening, a few preferred persons are singled out for these preposterous payments," he added.


      BLACK LIVES MATTER

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      • #18
        Originally posted by Mosiah View Post
        "We are resolute that this must not happen again," added Shaw, as he argued that the money allocated for the FINSAC enquiry was always public, as it was included in his budget presentation last April.
        Proof that One Third was totally clueless as to the gravity of the world recession and its effect on Jamaica.


        BLACK LIVES MATTER

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        • #19
          Fiyah bun fi all a dem. $2,400 US per day! If me was Justice Carey mi wouldn't have anything to say but SMACK my lips!

          What an atrocity!
          Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
          - Langston Hughes

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          • #20
            what was the name of the finsac administrator...richard somebody or other anyone recalls his package?

            Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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