Teixeira again sets record straight on PAC meetings

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See below full release from the Minister of Parliamentary Affairs and Governance, Gail Teixeira: 

It is rather interesting that certain media houses weekly repeat ad nauseum the accusations of  the Opposition members on the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) in regards to its meetings, without any attempt to verify whether the claims have merit. Much liberty is given to  conclusions accusing the Government members but regrettably for the critics, the functioning  of the PAC in the 12th Parliament has not been diminished in comparison to the 10th and 11th Parliaments, quorum or no quorum.  

I had provided factual information at the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs and Governance’s  “2023 in Review” press conference on January 10, 2024, and further spoke on this matter in  Parliament, as did Minister Edghill, providing comparative data on the number of sittings of  the PAC and other committees during the 10th, 11th and 12th Parliaments. This information was  evidently ignored. 

I have therefore once again updated the information to the most recent meeting of the PAC and  this is enclosed herein for easy reading. The information provided is sourced directly from the  records of the Public Accounts Committee.  

Table showing a comparison of the work done by the Public Accounts Committee (PAC)  during the 10th, 11th, and 12th Parliaments

10th Parliament 

(2012- 2014)

11th Parliament 

(2015 – 2019)

12th Parliament 

(2021 – present)

Total Number of  Meetings Held  58  44  61
Reports submitted  to the National  

Assembly on the  Public Accounts  of Guyana.

Report on the public  accounts for the year  2009.  

(Tabled in the  

National Assembly  on Dec 17, 2012.)

3 reports covering 6  Annual Audit reports.  

Combined Report of  the public accounts for  the years 2010 and  2011

(Tabled in the  

National Assembly on  Nov 28, 2016).

2 reports covering 3  Annual Audit Reports 

Report on the public  accounts for the year  2016.  

(Tabled in National  

Assembly on July 21,  2022).

 

Chairman – Carl  

Greenidge

Combined Report on  the public accounts for  the years 2012, 2013  and 2014.  

(Tabled in the  

National Assembly on  July 27, 2017) 

Report on the public  accounts for the year  2015. 

(Tabled in the  

National Assembly on  August 8, 2018). 

Chairman – 

Mohamed Irfaan Ali 

Combined Report on  the public accounts for  the years 2017 and  

2018 is completed and  awaiting a Sitting of the  National Assembly to  be tabled. 

Chairman – Jermaine Figueira 

Other reports  

submitted.

Report of the PAC on  the appointment of  members to the Public  Procurement  

Commission. (Tabled  on August 4, 2016).

Report of the PAC on  the appointment of  

members to the Public  Procurement  

Commission. (Tabled  on April 13, 2022).

 

[Table updated on April 25, 2024] 

One can easily observe from the matrix that the PAC of the 11th Parliament which worked for  40 months and held 58 meetings produced the most work under the then Opposition  Chairperson, Mohamed Irfaan Ali, whereas the PAC in the 12th Parliament has had 61 meetings  over 30 months.  

Presently, the review of Government agencies in the PAC relates to the Annual Auditor  General’s reports for the period of the former APNU+AFC government, but the number of  violations of the Procurement Act, missing documents, the refusal or non-cooperation of former  Permanent Secretaries and Regional Executive Officers to appear before the committee have  been of little interest to some media houses which have full and complete access to the PAC  hearings for these agencies. 

During the 11th Parliament, the level of scandals and violations of the Procurement Act was  pervasive, widespread, and commented on almost daily by some media houses. Therefore, the  Government members on the PAC have no intention of rushing through these years as the  Opposition members would like us to do. Their objective is to go though these reports rapidly  so as to detract public focus from what transpired during those years. 

It may seem presumptuous these days for a Minister to make a suggestion to the media on how  it covers the Public Accounts Committee but may l do so anyway – The Auditor General reports,  special reports and performance reports provide a wealth of information which should inform  journalism, or reporting, on the work of the PAC and its findings, including undeniable  evidence of poor management, unaccounted expenditure, lack of transparency, and denial of  services to the poor and vulnerable. These shortcomings, to be polite, were compounded by  inadequate pharmaceutical and medical supplies to the regions, mismanagement of the school  feeding programmes, and injustices meted out the healthcare sector which, for example, suffered extensively from inadequate COVID-19 protective equipment and supplies during a  global pandemic. 

The Opposition members in the PAC may want the public to forget these harsh realities that directly hurt the people of Guyana, and instead occupy the public’s attention with vacuous  questions of whether the Government members and Ministers should sit on the PAC, or whether  the members are attending the PAC meetings, and if the committee is meeting enough times.  These are mere distractions from the real issues being uncovered by the PAC. 

The fact is that the PAC today has met more often than during the 10th and 11th Parliaments and  produced two (2) reports. During the 11th Parliament, within 44 meetings, three (3) reports  were produced and the first Public Procurement Commission (PPC) was established under the  leadership of Mohamed Irfaan Ali who was chair of the 11th Parliament’s PAC.  

Further, the insinuations made by the APNU/AFC that Ministers of Government should not sit  on the PAC is hypocritical and preposterous as during the APNU+AFC’s tenure in Government during the 11th parliament, two of their members on the PAC were sitting Ministers of  Government. Those were Mrs. Volda Lawrence and Mrs. Valerie Patterson.  

The main issue, however, cannot be wished away – facts are facts, the APNU and AFC could  not adequately manage Government in their term of office and could not deliver to the people  simply because corruption was rife, and much to their dissatisfaction, the work of the PAC  exposes this at each meeting.  

I have no intention of resigning as a member of the PAC as l am very aware of the analysis and  skills l bring to the meetings, regardless of how much wilful haste the Chair and opposition  exercise to rush through paragraphs at one time in an effort to hide the corruption which  hallmarked the 2015-2020 period.  

It is the role of the PAC to offer to the National Assembly and truly to the people pf Guyana, a  critical analysis of public expenditure which includes revenues earned from tax-payers. As such, no efforts will be spared by the Government members of the PAC to review the accounts  of every year, 2015 to 2020 and beyond, as such haste from the opposition only proves to be a  wilful disservice to all the people of Guyana. 

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