Thursday 9th of February 2012 04:26:02 PM
 
 
 
Home Supplement The 5th Annual Joint Transport Sector Review Revamping of Uganda’s Works and Transport Sector

Revamping of Uganda’s Works and Transport Sector

E-mail Print PDF

Stakeholders in joint review of Transport sector progress

The Ministry of Works and Transport technical team and other key stakeholders will converge at Imperial Royale Hotel in Kampala this week to assess the performance of the transport sector and map out strategic interventions to bridge the gaps, where they exist, and revamp the country’s road network to boost economic development. The three-day workshop starts October 20-22. The Joint Transport Sector Review will examine the problems affecting the sector, review the progress being made, make critical assessment of new developments and ultimately map out the way forward to improve the management and development of the transport sector.

The government has for the second year running maintained funding for roads at the same level as in 2008/09 financial year. This is testimony of the importance the government attaches to the sector.

Key objectives

·         Review the progress on the implementation of actions agreed at the 2008 Joint Transport Sector Review (JTSR) and the road construction unit cost workshop.

·         Review the status of key sector reforms.

·         Review the performance of sector projects and programmes.

·         Discuss the implementation strategy for the Nation Transport Master Plan and Greater Kampala Metropolitan Area (GKMA).

·         Review the progress on development of the central corridor route to the sea and agree on the action plan for the period up to October 2010

Papers to be presented:

·         Transport services and projects

·         Implementation of the district, urban and community access roads (ducar) programmes

·         Restructuring of the ministry

·         Development of the central corridor route to the sea

·         Implementation strategy for the national transport master plan including a transport master plan for the greater kampala metropolitan area

·         Creating opportunities for sustainable spending on roads A proposed project to be funded by DFID and the EC.

·         Implementation of the Road Fund in Uganda

·         Report on national roads construction and maintenance rogrammes

·         Construction standards and quality assurance

·         Governance and accountability in the transport sector in Uganda.

Restructuring of the Ministry

Background

The Public Sector Reforms in Government aim at the withdrawal of the state from direct service delivery, reserving for itself the roles of policy making, regulation and monitoring. This is premised on increasing reliance on the motivations and efficiencies of the private sector for implementation operations. The reforms in the transport sector were therefore driven by Government policies of privatisation, liberalization of the economy, and decentralization. The reforms called for restructuring of the Ministry of Works and Transport (MoWT) to take on a new role. 

The restructuring was meant to shed off the Ministry’s executive functions that were inconsistent with its new role, such as Road Maintenance Management, Road Development, Plant Management, Ferry Services Management, Axle Load Control Management etc. These functions were included in the portfolio of the Uganda National Road Authority.

In this way, the new Ministry structure reflects Government’s aim for developing an integrated transport policy based on sector-wide considerations focused on general transport issues rather than individual sub-sectors. The resulting lean Ministry structure emphasizes professionalism in the core areas of the transport sector i.e. road, rail, water and air transport.

The restructuring of the Ministry was to be implemented in a phased manner to avoid disruption of service delivery and any adverse social impact likely to arise from the restructuring process would be mitigated. The restructuring of MoWT

was planned to commence in January, 2008 – July, 2010.

Achievements Made :

Since the last meeting in October 2008, the following has been achieved;

Issuance of the Approved Structure:-In February 2009, the final Ministry structure was approved by the Ministry of Public Service. The new mandate of the Ministry is ‘’To plan, develop and maintain an economic , efficient and effective works and transport infrastructure and services ; manage public buildings and develop standards in the construction industry”.

Planned Activities:Below are the planned activities for the next twelve month’s:-a) Conclude payment of retirement benefits both severance and pension in liaison with Ministry of Public Service;b) Seek approval of the proposed deployments by TMT;c) In liaison with PSC, conduct promotional interviews;d) Following up on all re-designation cases with PSC;e) Analyzing the staffing levels and declare remaining vacancies after the promotions;f) Implementation of the CMT Action Plang) Capacity Building: Intensifying Staff reorientation, training /development to improve staff skills and competencies to enable them deliver on the new mandate.h) Recruitment: fill all the remaining vacancies to fill the ministry establishment of 582 positions.

In conclusion, the restructuring of the Ministry has been guided by the previous restructuring implementation guidelines and the approved organizational structure of the Ministry. The Restructuring is being carried out in a phased manner. The establishment of a change management team will mitigate the effects of restructuring and ensure a vibrant new MoWT. Its hoped that by the next Joint Transport Sector Review Meeting, the total establishment (582) will be filled to en-able the Ministry deliver on its new mandate efficiently and effectively.

Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment

busy
 
 
 

Podcasts

Videos

You need Flash player 6+ and JavaScript enabled to view this video.




RECOMMENDED

Society
Forget `Angry Birds’ Now you can play `Angry Brides’ A new Facebook app created by popular matrimonial website shaadi.com lets players fight ‘greedy grooms’ who demand dowry – a practice that stubbornly persists...
 

MOST READ

LATEST COMMENTS

Gusto Says:
2012-02-09 12:17:00
Who owns Umeme is the pertinent question now.

mulwani. Taminwa Says:
2012-02-09 13:06:14
UMEME Must be scraped since its not owned by nobody in UK its not  registered, Here registrar of companies has failed to  produce the people who registered Umeme in Uganda. who is telling  Uganda

 
Joomla Templates and Joomla Extensions by JoomlaVision.Com
Overcast

34°C

Overcast

Humidity: 9%

Wind: SE at 7 mph

POLL

Is it right for government to give each MP 103 Million shillings to buy a car?
 
ON THE SHELVES
Banner
 

Cover: Besigye, supporters disagree on guns, Colonel under pressure over calls for war not words.

Special reportLicensed killers, how the state protects those who kill for it.

BusinessMore hope than fear with SIM registration..


Name:

Email:

COMMENT
A light at the end of the tunnel Eliminating the menace of Neglected Tropical Diseases Though much of the world has never heard of diseases like lymphat...
 
 

 
 
Copyright © 2012 The Independent: You get the truth We Pay the Price. All Rights Reserved.