The Housing Development Corporation’s (HDC) decision to cancel its controversial $3.4 billion Design-Build-Finance housing procurement exercise was the correct one. While the move has sparked political debate and renewed scrutiny of the housing sector, the overriding principle must remain the protection of the public interest and the integrity of the country’s procurement system.
However, the cancellation of what may be the largest housing award in this country’s history must not bring an end to the investigation launched by the Office of Procurement Regulation (OPR). The regulator has already established that termination of a process does not erase the need for scrutiny. In a ruling delivered on May 28, 2026, in the matter involving Amalgamated Security Services and Paria Fuel Trading Company, a three-member panel held that “cancellation did not defeat the challenge.” That precedent is directly relevant to the current HDC case.
The OPR should therefore continue its inquiry, particularly on the question of whether State entities using public funds or assets are required to invite open tenders for large, high-value projects. Once concerns were raised about the conduct of the exercise and the regulator directed that the process be suspended pending review, the issue became a test of the procurement framework itself.
The Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Property Act was introduced to ensure transparency, accountability, fairness and value for money in the use of public resources. These are not optional principles—they are fundamental safeguards designed to protect taxpayers and foster confidence in public institutions.
Against that backdrop, the HDC’s decision to discontinue the exercise, rather than allow it to become mired in prolonged disputes, is commendable. While the country urgently needs additional housing and thousands remain on waiting lists, speed must never come at the expense of proper process. Public bodies must be prepared to pause, reassess, and, where necessary, restart procurement exercises when concerns arise.
Importantly, the cancellation should not be seen as an abandonment of the Government’s housing objectives. The HDC has indicated that the projects will be retendered alongside additional developments, potentially expanding opportunities for contractors and accelerating delivery. A properly conducted procurement exercise can achieve both goals: increasing housing stock while maintaining public confidence in the fairness of contract awards.
The OPR must now be allowed to complete its review and publish its findings. The public has a legitimate interest in understanding whether procurement principles were fully observed, whether deficiencies existed and what lessons can be learned. Transparency demands that these findings be communicated clearly.
The OPR’s role extends beyond identifying wrongdoing. It is also tasked with promoting best practices, strengthening accountability and reinforcing trust in the procurement system. This current scenario should therefore serve as a reminder to all State agencies that compliance is not a procedural formality, but a fundamental obligation.
As the HDC prepares to return these projects to the market, there is an opportunity to demonstrate that the system works: concerns are raised, oversight is exercised, processes are halted and corrective action is taken in the public interest.
That is how accountability is meant to function.












