Vieira’s letter contained inaccuracies on Private Sector Commission

Dear Editor,

We are grateful to you for the opportunity to respond to Mr Tony Vieira’s letter captioned ‘In a vote the Private Sector Commission would be pro-government’ which was carried in your publication on December 20, 2013.  In his letter, Mr Vieira uses inaccurate information to support his contention that the Private Sector Commission is essentially pro-government due to the composition of its membership.

The Private Sector Commission currently has twenty-two corporate members and seventeen sectoral members.  The seventeen sectoral members, which are business organisations from across the country and each of which represents hundreds of individual members covering a gamut of religious and political persuasions, include the following:

The Guyana Manufacturing and Services Association

The Shipping Association of Guyana

The Guyana Association of Bankers

The Guyana Gold and Diamond Miners’ Association

The Guyana Association of Trawler Owners and

Seafood Processors

The Aircraft Owners Association of Guyana

The Forest Products Association of Guyana

The Guyana Association of Private Security

Organisations

The Institute of Private Enterprise Development

The National Aquaculture Association of Guyana

The Consultative Association of Guyanese Industry

The Georgetown Chamber of Commerce and Industry

The Rupununi Chamber of Commerce and Industry

The Linden Chamber of Industry Commerce and

Development

The Tourism and Hospitality Association of Guyana

The Upper Corentyne Chamber of Commerce and

Industry

The Central Corentyne Chamber of Commerce

 

The Commission is governed by a Council which currently consists of twenty-three members.  The Council is equivalent to a Board.  The seventeen sectoral members each have one vote on the Council while all the corporate members collectively have six votes.  This structure which is written into our bylaws was crafted to ensure that large national or multi-national corporate members do not dominate the groupings of smaller businesses.  It would therefore not be correct to assume that decisions of the Commission are unduly influenced by the corporate members. Mr Vieira also opines that the Commission issues positions on matters without convening a meeting of the Commission. It is established procedure to consult the Council prior to releasing public statements but this consultation, as with most of the Commission’s business, is conducted electronically in the interest of efficiency.

For the record, the current Executive Management Committee of the Private Sector Commission consists of the following persons:

Chairman and Chair of the Energy Sub-Committee – Mr Ronald Webster

Vice-Chairman and Chair of the Finance Sub-Committee – Mr Ramesh Persaud

Secretary and Chair of the Trade and Investment Sub-Committee – Mr Ramesh Dookhoo

Treasurer – Mr John Willems

Chair, Social Sectors Sub-Committee – Ms Annette Arjoon-Martins

Chair, Environment and Communications Sub-Committee – Mr Kit Nascimento

Chair, Agriculture Sub-Committee – Mr Beni Sankar

Chair, Building Sub-Committee – Mr Edward Boyer

Chair, Governance and Security Sub-Committee – Capt Gerald Gouveia

Chair, Transportation and Infrastructure Sub-Committee – Mr Michael Correia

In the event that Mr Vieira’s information was gleaned from an outdated PSC website, we would like to assure him and the public that the website is in the process of being updated.  In the interim, we would invite Mr Vieira or any other interested persons to uplift a copy of our current Annual Report from the Commission’s Secretariat for detailed lists of our membership.

 Yours faithfully,

Elizabeth Alleyne

Executive Director

Private Sector Commission