Garfield Ekon
Staff Writer
With an allocation of $14,918,892, to be spent during fiscal year 2024, 2025, the Ministry of Public Safety and Utilities will seek to consistently excel in service delivery and produce high quality products.
Delivering a Ministerial Statement to the National House of Assembly, recently, Portfolio Minister, Hon. Kyle R. Knowles says part of this year’s mission is to enhance customer service experiences and uphold the ‘highest standards of excellence and accountability” for the citizens of the Turks and Caicos Islands.
“It is on this basis that the Ministry’s focus will be on ‘Forging Ahead: Building A Stronger, More Sustainable Ministry,’” as it aims to deliver on key programme strategies achieving “our key strategic priorities and initiatives,” he said.
Adding that the work of the Ministry is “closely linked” to the Government’s mandate in delivering for the people, he said collectively, its work to achieve “these very ambitious goals” for the benefits of citizens.
Immediate priority is being placed on the Energy and Utilities Department, which is “heavily engaged in regulatory reform,” and requires a robust, multifaceted and strategic approach to strengthening and expanding regulatory oversight.
“The current regulatory environment is in dire need of reform, and the Ministry remains resolute in executing on the Government’s mandate as it relates to energy and utilities and the impact it has on” Islanders, the Minister said.
He pointed out that a key part of the reform will be the establishment of a multi-sector independent regulatory body, which will be responsible for ensuring regulatory accountability, good governance, independence, and transparency.
Crucial to the reform he said, will be modernising the legislative framework to better oversee monopoly and quasi-monopoly utilities, “ensuring that the Government sets policy while the Regulatory Commission carries out its legislated responsibilities independently,” he told the assembly.
He said sustainability underpins the strategic goals of the Department, and the critical intersection of regulatory reform and renewable energy highlights the necessity for a contemporary regulatory framework to address the evolving energy landscape. “This reform is pivotal for harnessing renewable energy’s potential to help with stabilising electricity rates,” he said
Minister Knowles said the ]Department will be “heavily engaged” with professional consultancy to support, mobilize and carry out its important work, and the Water Undertaking in line with the Government’s commitment to the development and expansion of water infrastructure on Grand Turk, “significant progress has been made on the 1-million-gallon salt water reverse osmosis plant project.
“Many milestones have been met on this initiative and we anticipate a successful completion and commissioning this year after the construction of the Reverse Osmosis plant building, distribution pump building, feed pump building, piping works and electrical works for the Reverse Osmosis plant,” he said.
He also reported that the Department of Rehabilitation and Community Services is committed to preventing and reducing crime in the island, through effective offender management, community partnerships, and dynamic rehabilitation initiatives.
“We will be focusing on enhancing the physical, procedural, and dynamic security across the prison. These efforts will ensure that we continue to protect and serve the public by keeping prisoners safely detained who pose the greatest risks to our nation’s security,” he said.
The Domestic Fire and Rescue Service, one of key frontline departments, will be focusing on strengthening its legislative powers through the implementation of supporting regulations to ensure better compliance and stronger enforcement throughout the islands “ensuring that fire safety standards are adhered to and are supported by proper inspections and maintenance,” the Minister said.