Acting Police Commissioner Junior Benjamin has admitted that the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service erred in the way it previously handled the purchasing and maintenance of many of its vehicles.
The Acting CoP’s admission comes after a Sunday Guardian investigative story that revealed that around 55 per cent of the TTPS’ fleet of 2,388 vehicles is out of service despite it spending more than $1 billion in purchasing, maintaining and renting vehicles between 2013 and 2023.
According to Acting CoP Benjamin, it’s an area that he is working on, as he aims to improve value for the service’s money.
“The whole idea of repairs of vehicles, we want to ensure that there is a proper system in place, where we will be able to monitor our vehicles on a regular basis to ensure that when vehicles are due for repairs, it is done properly.
“We want to make sure we have greater collaboration with our suppliers, even those doing repairs and even those who are personal contractors who we use from time to time,” the acting CoP said.
Benjamin said the service was in discussions to establish Memorandums of Understanding(MOU) to improve the quality of maintenance work on vehicles.
“We are also looking at the issue of drivers driving vehicles. I think, sometimes, we drive recklessly. We want to ensure greater training and even monitoring of our officers driving vehicles—some new technology that’s going to help us gauge that.
“We are also looking at our OPR that deals with procurement and disposal. So even with that, when we are dealing with disposal, in particular. When we deal with our disposal committee, we will hire an expert with us to guide us,” he added.
During his 2025 budget presentation, Finance Minister Colm Imbert promised 2,000 new TTPS vehicles over the next three years.
Of the $1 billion spent by the TTPS between 2013 and 2023, at least $299 million was spent on purchasing vehicles, $368 million on maintenance and $172 million on rentals.
Between 2014 and 2023, the TTPS has spent upwards of $25 billion overall, Finance Ministry documents stated.