After eight months in office, Junior Ministers Phillip Alexander, Clyde Elder and Ernesto Kesar say their work across Housing, Public Utilities and Energy has been defined by intense preparation, problem-solving and a focus on delivering tangible improvements to citizens’ lives.
Speaking in separate interviews with Guardian Media yesterday, the three ministers outlined the realities they inherited on entering government, the challenges they faced and how their respective roles are contributing to national recovery and development.
Restoring order and laying foundations
in Housing
Minister in the Ministry of Housing, Phillip Alexander, described inheriting a ministry “in some disarray,” marked by institutional disconnects and financial strain within the Housing Development Corporation (HDC) and its related entities.
According to Alexander, the first months were dominated by fact-finding, meetings with senior technical staff and stabilising operations under the leadership of Minister Dr David Lee and newly appointed HDC chairman Feeroz Khan. That work, he said, was necessary to place the ministry in a position to complete stalled projects, advance new developments and prepare for public-private partnerships aligned with the Prime Minister’s housing mandate.
Among the ministry’s key achievements so far, Alexander pointed to getting finances under control, addressing inherited debt and streamlining operations despite limited funds in the current budget cycle.
Looking ahead, Alexander said his goal is to help accelerate housing delivery, learn from international best practices and raise national housing standards.
Utilities and
human impact
Clyde Elder described his role in the Ministry of Public Utilities as primarily supportive but deeply people-centred.
Working alongside line minister Barry Padarath, Elder said responsibilities are shared strategically, with junior ministers leading on specific state entities and policy areas, including labour relations across companies such as WASA, T&TEC, TSTT and TTPost.
For him, the most rewarding aspects of the role have been direct interventions that changed lives. He recounted the electrification of a family’s home for the first time, made possible through volunteer efforts by T&TEC staff, and the extension of water supply to a rural village where residents had lived without piped water for decades.
“These are the moments that remind you why public service matters,” Elder said, adding that access to basic utilities such as water and electricity underpins dignity, health and opportunity.
Looking ahead, he outlined plans to chair an inter-ministerial committee aimed at better co-ordination of infrastructure works, including a proposed “one-dig” policy to reduce repeated road excavation by different utilities. He also pointed to upcoming environmental initiatives, including support for the Beverage Container Bill and expressed a personal commitment to extending electricity to underserved rural communities, drawing on his own childhood experience growing up without it.
Energy, repair work and economic recovery
In the energy sector, Junior Minister Ernesto Kesar characterised his first eight months as a period of “serious work,” focused on repair, revitalisation and rejuvenation.
He said the ministry moved quickly to address inherited challenges while laying the groundwork for significant energy activity expected in 2026.
Kesar pointed to ongoing and anticipated projects across the sector and renewed onshore prospects that could strengthen national gas reserves.
He said these efforts are critical given the economy’s reliance on energy and the pressures facing T&T.
A major focus for Kesar has been the Petrotrin refinery and its closure, which he described as one of the most damaging economic decisions in recent history, particularly for south and central Trinidad.
He said the submission of the refinery restart committee’s report marks an important step toward addressing the economic and social devastation experienced by former workers and their families.
While expressing cautious optimism about the future, Kesar acknowledged that the economy remains fragile and much depends on the success of energy sector reforms and investments in the coming year.
— Jesse Ramdeo
