Jacked-up rates by New GPC created urgency for drug bond

Defending Public Health Minister Dr George Norton amid growing criticism over a controversial contract for the storage of pharmaceuticals, President David Granger said the minister entered into the contract to avoid the new rates being demanded by the New GPC.

“The Ministry of Public Health attempted to avoid the pitfalls which prevailed under the previous administration… what happened is that the new administration decided to bring an end to single sourcing,” the President said during this week’s recording of “The Public Interest.”

“Government found it impossible to pay new rate being charged by the corporation under the old arrangement…It was almost impossible, punitive, which caused the government to seek a new bond,” he added.

On Monday, Norton was taken to task in the National Assembly when he told the House that the drugs were being stored in a bond at Lot 29 Sussex Street, Albouystown, where $12.5 million monthly was being paid to the new rental company identified as Linden Holdings.

According to Norton, government was paying the New GPC $19.2 million a month to store the pharmaceuticals and wanted a cheaper facility. He said that with the “exorbitant price called by the New GPC” there was an urgency to find new storage.

It later emerged that the new facility was in fact a converted house and moreso, was still being renovated. In the light of the ensuing controversy, President David Granger on Tuesday appointed a Cabinet Sub-Committee to review, examine and report on the storage of medicine and medical supplies.

On Thursday, Sub-Committee Chairman Raphael Trotman said Norton had misled the National Assembly during his answers and called on him to issue a public apology. He also said that the Sub-Committee advised that the deal for the Sussex Street premises should be reviewed.

However, Trotman also dismissed the fact that the government’s advance to Linden Holdings Inc and the cost of the bond were the same as a mere coincidence. “I see it as nothing more than a coincidence that the price paid and the price of the security deposit and the first month’s rental are the same,” he said.

Observers said the coincidence could lead to the impression that the government had financed the purchase of the bond for a businessman who would then profit off the arrangement.

The APNU+AFC government’s single sourcing of the contract to businessman Lawrence Singh, who has had no previous involvement in the storage of pharmaceuticals, has also raised questions about who in the administration made the initial connection with him.

In addition, former Auditor General Anand Goolsarran has said that a Sub-Committee of Cabinet should not have been reviewing the controversial deal as it was Cabinet which had been reported to have had made the decision to sign off on the rental in the first place.

Meanwhile, speaking on “The Public Interest” Granger said the Public Health Ministry had to think about timing. “They had to think about short-term storage of drugs and that led to the adoption or quest for a new bond under Linden Holdings, a new company. It was an act driven by necessity, not by any kind of perversity. It was an act done because the old arrangement, single sourcing, was brought to an end and once the corporation that was the beneficiary of that system discovered that, they imposed what was called punitive rates and the government had no choice but to seek a new bond to store pharmaceuticals,” he asserted.