EVEN as the Integrity Commission (IG) threatened legal action against public officials for failure to file their declarations of income, assets and liabilities, President Christine Kangaloo appealed to the business community to forget how invasive the process is and offer themselves for national service.
She said she knows it can be an onerous task and quite invasive, but she is finding difficulty in filling board positions with experienced and skilled individuals she is required by law to appoint.
The scrutiny those in public life undergo has been a deterrent to qualified people offering to serve, an observation that has warranted comment in the past from both the Prime Minister and former president Paula-Mae Weekes.
As she addressed the Couva Point Lisas Chamber Dinner and Awards function on Wednesday night, President Kangaloo applauded the business community for its role in the social and economic development of the country.
She urged them to go one step further, 'to serve on the wide range of boards, commissions and tribunals that have been established by Parliament and other authorities, to perform regulatory or similar functions', as they are specially equipped to do so.
'I am beginning to discover it is not always easy for a President to find the required number of persons, with the required skills and experience, to serve in those capacities on occasions when a President is required by law to make such appointments.'
She encouraged the business community to encourage more of its members than currently do to serve in these capacities.
'Serving in these capacities is very much a means of serving the wider society. At this juncture in our country's development, I believe that it is a critically important means of national service.'
Kangaloo told the audience, which included chamber president Mukesh Ramsingh, and three Opposition MPs Ravi Rattiram, Barry Padarath and Rudradanath Indarsingh, that she understands very well the challenges of serving in these capacities.
One of them is filing annual declarations, and earlier this year, the IG published the names of over 500 defaulters in public life of their failure to file their declarations of income, assets and liabilities and statements of registrable interest. The release came with a reminder of legal action, plus a hefty $150,000 fine under Section 11(8) of the Integrity in Public Life Act (IPLA) if found liable.
'Believe you me - I understand only too well the challenges of serving in these capacities. Those who do so expose themselves to the risk of being criticised, often unfairly, by the very public whom they serve.
'As members of that very public, we might sometimes seem to such persons like ungrateful children in this regard. Like good parents do, persons who answer this particular call to serve the greater good, bear it all - with love and with patience.
'In some cases, service such as I am making a case for brings with it the obligation to avoid engaging in other activities that we might love (in order to preserve the appeara