Neita-Garvey calls for digital overhaul of Jamaica's municipal services
Natalie Neita-Garvey MP has called for a major digital transformation of Jamaica's local government system, arguing during the 2026 Sectoral Debate that municipal authorities must be better funded, modernised and equipped to serve citizens in real time.
She said Jamaica cannot meet its development ambitions, including becoming the place of choice to live, while local government remains slow to respond to public needs. Funding, she argued, is necessary but insufficient without a broader shift in how municipal corporations function.
Neita-Garvey proposed what she described as a Smart Municipal Jamaica initiative, aimed at turning every municipal corporation into a digitally capable, citizen-centred institution. Under the proposal, Jamaicans would be able to apply online for permits, licences and municipal approvals, track applications as they move through the system, receive timelines, escalate delays and pay fees electronically.
She said municipal services should also allow residents to make service requests through shared platforms, receive automatic updates, follow infrastructure projects, take part in consultations and access public information more easily.
In a direct criticism of outdated public administration, Neita-Garvey told Parliament that "bureaucracy should not feel like archaeology," adding that citizens should not have to move from office to office to find out what is happening with their applications.
The MP said Jamaica needs a unified digital ecosystem linking municipal corporations across the country. She pointed to common platforms, shared technology standards, interoperable systems, a single citizen portal, one municipal identity framework and a national standard for responsiveness.
She also argued that digitisation should support community safety and climate resilience, not only administrative efficiency. Such systems, she said, should help authorities identify blocked gullies, shelters that are not functional or properly resourced, communities facing higher flood risk and areas affected by illegal dumping.
Technology, Neita-Garvey said, should reduce costs while helping to protect communities. She closed that section of her contribution by saying citizen participation and community engagement remain major concerns in governance.
Syndicated from Jamaica PNP (Video) · originally published .
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