Natalie Neita-Garvey urges local government finance overhaul, rejects $300,000 allocation
Natalie Neita-Garvey MP used her 2026 Sectoral Debate contribution to call for a major rethink of how Jamaica finances local government, arguing that municipal corporations must be treated as permanent engines of service delivery rather than bodies left waiting on approval from central government.
She said municipal authorities need a modern fiscal framework that allows them to carry out core duties, including drain cleaning, without being slowed by what she described as handouts or repeated requests for permission. Neita-Garvey also criticised a $300,000 allocation announced for councillors, telling the minister it was “an insult” and saying his own experience as a mayor should make clear that local government requires more funding.
According to Neita-Garvey, municipalities have faced difficult delays in receiving parochial revenue funds or in getting approval to use their SGRs, even after completing the required paperwork. She said those delays have prevented several parishes from carrying out planned work, pointing to rushed drain-cleaning activity when Melissa had already arrived.
The MP argued that the present financing structure is too limited for the responsibilities being placed on municipal corporations. She said local authorities depend too heavily on restricted revenue streams while public expectations continue to grow, a situation she described as unsustainable.
Neita-Garvey called for revenue administration to be upgraded through technology, stronger compliance systems and broader local income options. She said property tax collection should become more intelligent, open and efficient, adding that fairness for citizens must also include compliance and reduced leakage.
Among the tools she proposed were digital property databases, GIS mapping, joined-up billing systems, real-time compliance monitoring, automated payment platforms and predictive revenue planning.
She also said municipalities should gain more from economic activity taking place in their own areas. In her view, a modern local government model should allow structured revenue sharing tied to measurable results, including tourism growth, commercial expansion, industrial activity, real estate development, special economic zones and major transport infrastructure.
Syndicated from Jamaica PNP (Video) · originally published .
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