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Infrastructure Development Office set to take on expanded role as fully fledged Bureau

Secretary for Transport and Public Works Raimundo do Rosário says changes, which will involve some staff transfers, should be completed by July.

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Secretary for Transport and Public Works Raimundo do Rosário says changes, which will involve some staff transfers, should be completed by July.

ARTICLE BY

PUBLISHED

READING TIME

Less than 1 minute Minutes

The Infrastructure Development Office (GDI) is set to take over the planning and supervision of all government projects, once it is upgraded to bureau status later this year, while the Lands, Public Works and Transport Bureau will no longer be responsible for overseeing any government projects.

Secretary for Transport and Public Works Raimundo do Rosário announced the changes  after attending a closed-door committee meeting in the Legislative Assembly.

The Infrastructure Development Office was set up in 2000 as a “project team” tasked with planning and supervising large-scale infrastructure projects, such as land reclamation, bridges, flyovers, tunnels, checkpoints, ferry terminals, public housing, health facilities, and various other government buildings.

After the then Transport Infrastructure Office was abolished in 2019, the government’s task of supervising the construction of the Light Rail Transit has also been carried out by the Infrastructure Development Office.

In addition to its current functions of urban planning, land management, and the supervision of private projects, the Lands, Public Works and Transport Bureau is currently also tasked with planning and supervising certain public projects, normally smaller-scale ones, such as footbridges, roads, sewerage systems, and the renovation of government buildings.

The restructuring of both the Infrastructure Development Office and the Lands, Public Works and Transport Bureau is expected to be completed by the end of the first half of this year.

Rosário said that after the Infrastructure Development Office has been upgraded to a bureau, it will be responsible for all types of public projects.

The Lands, Public Works and Transport Bureau will no longer be responsible for any public sector projects, while it will keep all its other functions, namely urban planning, land management, and the supervision of private sector projects.

After the Lands, Public Works and Transport Bureau has been restructured, Rosário said, it will then have an additional unit tasked with supervising the city’s electrical and mechanical projects and facilities.

Rosário also said that the government will not hire any new staff after the restructuring of the two public entities due to financial constraints – instead it will transfer some officials from the Lands, Public Works and Transport Bureau to the upgraded Infrastructure Development Office.

Rosário said that after the Infrastructure Development Office has been upgraded, it will get new premises on one of the floors of the current Lands, Public Works and Transport Bureau headquarters in Estrada de D. Maria II, apart from its current premises in Nam Kwong Building in ZAPE and CNAC Building in NAPE, The Macau Post Daily reported. 

 

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