Sunday, September 30, 2007
Prime Minister Bruce Golding has outlined his plan to totally revamp the approval process for construction, creating instead a single authority that should reduce waiting time to 90 days. "If there is no objection after 90 days then the developer may proceed with his plans," said Golding.
He was speaking at the opening of the tenth staging of the Hardware Merchants Association (HMA) Home Hardware show held at the National Arena on Thursday.
Prime Minister Bruce Golding (left) greets Brenda La Grange Johnson, US ambassador to Jamaica, at the opening of the Hardware Merchants Association Home and Hardware Show held at the National Arena last Thursday. The show closes today. (Photo:Karl McLarty)
According to Golding the proposed process will see investors filing a single plan for development with the new authority and waiting 90 days for a response.
He explained that all the agencies now involved in the approval process, except environment, would be represented on the new Authority.
"Once you file those plans in accordance with what is stipulated, the authority has 90 days in which to object to the development."
The prime minister emphasised that in doing so he was shifting the onus from the developers and to the Authority.
"We will no longer require you to seek approval," Golding said, adding that one should not have to seek approval for doing something that is good for the country.
Any objections for example, inadequate parking facilities or a lack of water supply, would be communicated to the investor within a reasonable time allowing for better planning, Golding argued.
"The onus will have to be with the Authority," he added.
The cumbersome approval process now involves the submission of fifteen duplicates of a proposal to a Parish Council, which then passes them on to the relevant approval agencies and can take anywhere up to four years for final permission to proceed.
"We cannot be serious about investment if we place so many obstacles in the way of investment," Golding remarked.
Speaking on the exclusion of environment functions normally executed by National Environment and Planning Agency (NEPA), Golding said he believed that the environment should not be included in the planning and development authority.
"We believe that the environment ought to be a stand-alone agency. We don't want to compromise the environmental authority when it is a part of the planning approval," he said
Prime Minister Bruce Golding has outlined his plan to totally revamp the approval process for construction, creating instead a single authority that should reduce waiting time to 90 days. "If there is no objection after 90 days then the developer may proceed with his plans," said Golding.
He was speaking at the opening of the tenth staging of the Hardware Merchants Association (HMA) Home Hardware show held at the National Arena on Thursday.
Prime Minister Bruce Golding (left) greets Brenda La Grange Johnson, US ambassador to Jamaica, at the opening of the Hardware Merchants Association Home and Hardware Show held at the National Arena last Thursday. The show closes today. (Photo:Karl McLarty)
According to Golding the proposed process will see investors filing a single plan for development with the new authority and waiting 90 days for a response.
He explained that all the agencies now involved in the approval process, except environment, would be represented on the new Authority.
"Once you file those plans in accordance with what is stipulated, the authority has 90 days in which to object to the development."
The prime minister emphasised that in doing so he was shifting the onus from the developers and to the Authority.
"We will no longer require you to seek approval," Golding said, adding that one should not have to seek approval for doing something that is good for the country.
Any objections for example, inadequate parking facilities or a lack of water supply, would be communicated to the investor within a reasonable time allowing for better planning, Golding argued.
"The onus will have to be with the Authority," he added.
The cumbersome approval process now involves the submission of fifteen duplicates of a proposal to a Parish Council, which then passes them on to the relevant approval agencies and can take anywhere up to four years for final permission to proceed.
"We cannot be serious about investment if we place so many obstacles in the way of investment," Golding remarked.
Speaking on the exclusion of environment functions normally executed by National Environment and Planning Agency (NEPA), Golding said he believed that the environment should not be included in the planning and development authority.
"We believe that the environment ought to be a stand-alone agency. We don't want to compromise the environmental authority when it is a part of the planning approval," he said
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