CH&PA board unhappy over projected losses from independence discount on house lots

With a projected total loss of over $2B, the Board of the Central and Housing and Planning Authority (CH&PA) wants the current 50th Independence anniversary discount being offered to some house lot awardees halted.

Sources told Stabroek News that when the CH&PA board members met at yesterday’s statutory meeting, they discussed the expected losses as a result of the initiative.

“It will cost us over $2B and we are not sure the beneficiaries of the offer will really benefit,” an official of the agency, who asked not to be named, said.

The official explained that given that government was concentrating efforts on completing infrastructural works in housing schemes throughout the country, the monies that would have been lost could have been channeled to that effort.

Junior Minister Valerie Sharpe-Patterson, who has special responsibility for the housing sector, had last month announced that the agency was  offering a ‘50/50’ special payment option to recipients of government house lots, who were allotted lands valued $3 million and less, in residential areas.

Sharpe-Patterson stated that this initiative allows for persons who have completed paying 50% of the cost of their house lots by May 1, to benefit from a 50% discount on the balance. However, Sharpe-Patterson explained, the balance must be paid by the end of May.

“If you have an allocation for a house lot that cost $1 million, and by the first of May, you would have paid $500,000 which is 50%, then you have a 50% discount on the balance of the $500,000. So, you now have a discount of $250,000,” she explained while adding that persons had until April 30 to complete the 50% payment of their allocations to qualify.

Sharpe-Patterson stressed that only those who would have acquired house lots in residential areas that are valued $3 million and less would be eligible. Therefore, those with allocations in re-migrant schemes or industrial areas would not be eligible.

However, this would not exclude individuals who would have benefited from the turn-key home initiative in areas such as Perseverance on the East Bank Demerara. The minister explained that while both the house and land come at a combined cost of $4.9 million, the land in itself is valued $500,000. As a result, persons with the turn-key houses would also be able to qualify for the 50% discount on the land alone.

Sources say that the CH&PA Board and some government officials believe that the discount was a loss of needed revenue to develop the housing sector. “There are streets to be built, drainage to be looked at so forth,” one source said.