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Chief Secretary on 3rd anniversary: There is still room for improvement - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

THA CHIEF SECRETARY Farley Augustine says he will give his administration a grade seven out of ten for its performance in office over the past three years.

But he believes there is still room for improvement.

“If we are to rate the government’s performance, we are somewhere at seven out of ten. But being the kind of perfectionist that I am, I want to push in this last year to get it closer to ten. We have to go above and beyond for Tobagonians and the reward for good work is more work,” he told reporters at a prize-giving ceremony for the Chief Secretary’s Tobago Secondary Schools’ Art Competition at the Hampden/Lowlands Multipurpose Facility on December 6.

Augustine and the other sitting THA representatives were part of the Watson Duke-led Progressive Democratic Patriots (PDP), which had an overwhelming 14-1 victory over the People’s National Movement in the December 6, 2021 THA election.

But eight months into its term, Duke accused the THA of failing to financially assist the members of a Roxborough group that had gone to New York to perform at a cultural event.

Duke subsequently fired Augustine, Dr Faith BYisrael and Alicia Roberts-Patterson as PDP deputy political leaders. He also resigned as Deputy Chief Secretary and was replaced by BYisrael.

Augustine and the other assemblymen, who came into the THA on a PDP ticket, eventually resigned from the party. Their supporters later formed the Tobago People’s Party (TPP).

The party, which was officially launched on August 13, 2023, has signalled its intention to contest the Tobago East and West seats in the general election as well as all 15 electoral districts in the THA election, both of which are constitutionally due in 2025.

Reflecting on his tenure as Chief Secretary so far, Augustine said, “Across the three years, we have demonstrated an ability to remain stable even in the presence of what might appear to be chaos. Although we had several hiccups, although we had several challenges, I feel that we have a very stable government that was able to stabilise the Tobago economy post-covid19.”

He said his administration also has spent a considerable amount of resources “cleaning up the mess.

“Transformational leadership means you have to do a lot of messy work and a lot of messy cleaning up and I am happy that we have been able to get that done.”

Augustine said under his stewardship the THA has increased salaries and social grants.

He added, “We have given out more lands in under three years than the previous regime has given out in their whole 21 years, and that is lands for home ownership.”

The agriculture and health sectors, he said, have also seen significant improvements.

“You notice that we have far less complaints than we used to have in the past in the health care system? But despite all of that, I am pushing my team to continue doing more because this is not just about passing a certain mark or just doing better than those we replaced. It is about positioning Tobago towards becoming the greatest little island on the planet.

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