The new Govt hubs matter a lot

Dear Editor,
Anyone in Berbice who has ever had to take a day off work to chase a passport renewal, sort out a land-tax issue, update a birth record, or deal with a licensing matter knows the frustration. Too many offices, too much back-and-forth, and too much of our time wasted. That kind of run-around doesn’t just inconvenience people; it blocks opportunity for small businesses, young professionals, and families who need services done quickly and fairly.
That’s why I welcome the President’s announcement that Region Six will get three integrated Government Services Hubs. These hubs will bring key agencies together in one space and connect communities directly with decision-makers. President Ali, while he was in Berbice last week, explained that the hubs will include immigration, passport services, GRA, licensing, and civil registry transactions, all tied into online appointments and electronic ID services.
In plain terms, this means services closer to home and fewer trips to Georgetown. It means less confusion about where to go next. It means people from New Amsterdam to Skeldon, Black Bush Polder, and the wider Corentyne can walk into one place and solve multiple issues the same day. And it means NDCs are no longer left out of the loop.
Editor, what I also appreciate is the spirit behind it. The President spoke about a citizen-centred approach where “No issue must be allowed to escape the loop of Government.” That’s a commitment Berbice people have been asking for: not more talk, but a system that actually works for ordinary lives.
Nobody should have to feel like Government services are a maze. These hubs are a practical fix. If implemented well, they’ll save time, reduce costs, cut delays, and restore trust that public service exists to serve the public.

Yours sincerely,
Malita Persaud


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