By DANA SMITH
Tribune Staff Reporter
dsmith@tribunemedia.net
THE private contractors hired by the government to collect garbage will be terminated if they are not performing as expected, Environment and Housing Minsiter Kenred Dorsett said yesterday.
Explaining that the outsourcing of garbage collection to private companies has saved the government money, Mr Dorsett however noted there have been instances of garbage collectors “missing street corners” as a result of unfamiliarity.
The minister said the government is still considering whether their move to hire private collectors – rather than the government taking control of the issue – will become permanent and has hired an independent consultant to assist in that regard.
“We don’t have any DEHS trucks on the road. What you have now are private companies who are collecting garbage on behalf of the Department of Environmental Health Services,” he said.
“I think one of the challenges that we have had and there was just a meeting this week with those who are engaged by us is there is a degree of unfamiliarity with certain routes. They’ve been missing street corners in certain instances and they don’t understand that for some DEHS operators, we’ve been doing this for so long that we have relationships with the people whom we collect waste from, so they don’t know to call out to the elderly woman who normally keeps her waste inside the yard, to go in there to collect it.
“It’s just the nuances of the market that the private contractors are coming to bear with. But the good thing is, they are private contractors so if they’re not performing, they will be terminated.”
The minister said the government is “going to see how this works”, explaining that private collectors represent a “cost saving”.
“Clearly we’re saving on fuel and some other things by utilising the services,” Mr Dorsett said.
“We are going to engage in independent consultant to advise us on the entire framework so we as a government can understand whether or not we should invest $18 million in a new fleet to once get involved in the business or whether we should really allow the entrepreneurs to do it.”
Private contractors are paid “a sum of money that is half the cost of the government doing so,” Mr Dorsett said, when asked how much the government is paying the contractors.
He added: “In all routes, we now have private contractors collecting garbage simply because of the state of our fleet. We will determine if this is going to work well for us moving forward – whether it becomes a permanent feature or not. But for right now, they’re the ones collecting the garbage on behalf of the DEHS.”
If residents are noticing problems with garbage collection, Mr Dorsett said, they should contract either himself, personally, or the DEHS help desk.
“If you have a challenge with collection please report it to DEHS, immediately,” he said. “We have a team of five persons who are dedicated to this process and so I would recommend that they call the Department of Environmental Health Services, hit me up on Facebook, whatever/however you feel you need to reach out, but let us know if you feel your garbage is not being collected on time – that’s critical.”
Comments
lazybor 11 years, 1 month ago
let's wait and see...http://tinyurl.com/c7l9ck6" width="1">
proudloudandfnm 11 years, 1 month ago
Funny how I remember the trash collecting complaints starting about two weeks after May 7th, 2012....
John 11 years, 1 month ago
Speaking of garbage, do you know that nuclear waste from that crippled Japanese nuclear plant is still spilling into the ocean? Hundreds of thousands of gallons of nuclear waste pouring into the ocean and no one is saying anything How long will it be before we start to se disfigured fish and other altered sea life? Now the Japanese are saying they intend to build a 'wall of ice", to contain the waste. They intend to run a configuration of pipes into the Ocean that are connected to freezing machines. When turned on the machines will form a wall of ice to contain the nuclear waste. This is only a stop-gap measure intended to buy time. But not only will the project take years to complete but there is no guarantee it will work. And even if it does work what happens if there are power failures? Means many million gallons o even more highly concentrated wasted will be dumped into the ocean...say goodye to Nassau grouper and conch salad.
ThisIsOurs 11 years, 1 month ago
What's the criteria being used to select the contractors..."theyre not familiar with the route" seems likes a very poor excuse and a prime reason they should not have been selected in the first place. Its also obviously less than factual...anyone should be able to find Montague dock.
"Consultant" is a dirty word from any government official these days. I hope this isn't someone's unqualified business partner, friend or lover
How does the govt select these people? Prince Charles, for example, has been under construction for what, 2months now...at points falling into large craters...is the repaving being done by govt or a private contractor? If private they should never be used again...and the holdup was not the weather.
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