Pintard: Miller must resign for failing to deliver at BEC

By NICO SCAVELLA

Tribune Staff Reporter

nscavella@tribunemedia.net

FREE National Movement Chairman Michael Pintard has called for Leslie Miller to resign from his post at the Bahamas Electricity Corporation, also criticising the Tall Pines MP for not having the “capacity to deliver the kinds of ideas required to move BEC into the 21st century.”

Mr Miller is BEC’s executive chairman.

Echoing similar calls recently made by Bahamas Electrical Workers Union (BEWU) President Paul Maynard, Mr Pintard accused Mr Miller of having a “lack of respect” for BEC workers.

He said the chairman is “no longer appropriate to lead the corporation” and cited Mr Miller’s own payment history with the utility provider.

“He, therefore, does not have the moral capacity to enforce compliance with the rules at BEC or any payment schedule, because he himself has only paid a portion of his bill after a whistleblower indicated what his bill is,” Mr Pintard said.

“Even in paying a portion of his bill, the executive chairman paid in a format or in a manner that the law does not make provision for. The sum of money that was paid, we have no idea the origin of those funds, and clearly BEC has a policy in terms of how large sums of money ought to be spent with the corporation. That alone requires a new chairman.”

Mr Pintard was referring to union reports that Mr Miller’s daughter paid $100,000 in cash last summer on their family-owned business’ BEC bill, after the outstanding amount was leaked to the press.

He added: “The executive chairman ought to respect workers at BEC and clearly there is a lack of respect for these workers. So therefore I share their view, that he is no longer appropriate to lead this corporation. He might very well fit comfortably in another capacity in government, but at BEC he can no longer offer the type of leadership required.

“More fundamentally, the chairman is in place to ensure the reduction of the pain and suffering of Bahamians, which means lowering electricity costs and consistency in supply. He does not have the capacity to deliver the kinds of ideas required to move BEC into the 21st century, and on that ground, and that is the most important ground, we need new leadership.”

A fire at the Blue Hills Power Station caused an island-wide outage last Friday, which forced the company to conduct load-shedding exercises throughout the weekend. Mr Miller, on Sunday, blamed the problem on the management and staff who work at the Blue Hills Power Station.

He said the whole incident could have been avoided if “the machines were properly maintained and serviced”.

On Monday, however, Mr Maynard said unless the government immediately fired Mr Miller, the union would not support BEC’s restructuring process.

Mr Maynard insisted that a “fault occurred in the system”, causing a fire and the subsequent meltdown.

On Tuesday, Deputy Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis said he was satisfied that the blackout did not occur as a result of negligence by employees, contradicting Mr Miller’s earlier statements.

Mr Miller later apologised and insisted that his original statements to the press were “taken out of context”.

Comments

duppyVAT says...

Why are politicians given these ExChair jobs as perks for party loyalty or personal income??? They are in a Catch22 position from the very appointment ..................... gatta play the party game. That is a question that PLP and FNM must answer ........... Pintard??????????

Posted 19 March 2015, 3:36 p.m. Suggest removal

John says...

Man (God's creation) has more knowledge and technology and resources than at any time in at least 2,000 years. Yet he has built a civilization that he cannot control. he can't keep the lights of, he cannot keep the water flowing, He cannot stop the dump from burning. Sickness and disease are taking their tolls, while the average person cannot pay their bills and one quarter of the population is living below the poverty line and many are starving, one percent of the population controls 50 percent on the earth's wealth. It costs 74 cents to produce one kilowatt of electricity in Ghana but the government sells it for 52 cents because "they want to remain competitive." And in at least one other African state the current is off for only 12 hours on a good day

Posted 19 March 2015, 10:50 p.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

Not before Brave Davis, if Miller goes Davis and Gray must go

Posted 19 March 2015, 11:23 p.m. Suggest removal

sansoucireader says...

and the man who's always quoting "I am the Prime Minister" doesn't fire anyone. Unlike me, he believes in 2nd, 3rd and maybe more, chances. While we suffer...

Posted 20 March 2015, 9:30 a.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

If Mr Miller is forced out Brave Davis must go, not because of the blackouts but because of ALL of the colossal failures he has been at the wheel on. If his argument is he didn't know that's more reason for him to go. We need someone who knows. Brave doesn't know, Perry doesn't know, Gray doesn't know, Renward doesn't know and Nottage doesn't know. How can they run the country?

Posted 20 March 2015, 2:31 p.m. Suggest removal

Log in to comment