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By Zaldy Dandan
Variety Editor
What
a surprise
THE Saipan mayor
says his office is suspending its services because he cant
pay for the fuel of his offices vehicles. He blames the finance
department for not paying Mobil on time.
This announcement is surprising for two reasons: 1) Not a lot of people
are aware that the Saipan mayor has other tasks besides marrying people
and chaperoning students to Japan and South Korea; and 2) the mayor, apparently,
is the last CNMI official to know about this bankrupt governments
failure to pay any of its suppliers and vendors on time.
The mayor, however, is also trying to make a point in suspending his services.
And his point is that his office should be considered critical
because it actually performs public services. The unintended consequence
of his announcement, however, is to remind taxpayers, once again, about
the widespread duplication of efforts in this bloated and wasteful government.
These, according to the mayors press release writer, are his offices
services: water truck deliveries, quarry operations and coral deliveries,
road repairs, junk car removal, site preparations for wakes and funerals,
village cleanups and beautification projects.
What among these tasks cannot be, or is not already being, performed by
private companies, private individuals, DPW, DEQ and volunteer groups?
And we all wonder why this government continues to sink into the financial
swamp of its own making.
Limit competition and cheaters get ahead
CUC has yet to
explain why it wants firms interested in the power privatization procurement
to pay $76,000 in nonrefundable fees just for the privilege of being pre-qualified.
This requirement doesnt help the CNMIs reputation abroad,
and it tarnishes the reputation of the new executive director of the Commonwealth
Utilities Corp. as well. CUC officials may be hoping that other urgent
issues like minimum wage, immigration, and the governments bankruptcy
will distract the public from the obscene scenario it has prepared for
competitors in the power project. It wont.
As CUC, of all agencies, should know, bad procurements do not go away.
These transactions are a matter of official record. As CUC plows ahead
without regard for these considerations it is saddling itself and its
officials with the consequences of an irredeemable loss of reputation
and credibility. This, in turn, places a high toll on the cost of doing
business in the CNMI, and will inevitably cost ordinary power users.
Less business means less competition, which means higher costs for consumers.
Less business means fewer competent and qualified firms, and this translates
to substandard service at a higher cost. If CUC does not and it
should reverse its decision to impose the pre-qualification fees,
it is dooming its consumers to fewer choices
and higher costs. These
will be the results of the CUC managements decision, and it is important
that the public know where the responsibility lies.
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