CO129-341 - Acting Governor May Governor Lugard - 1907 [7-10] — Page 692

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All AI Reviewed

(or as soon as they are submitted) and I hope that it may result in some practical method of reducing office work while maintaining the control and supervision of expenditure which is required by Financial Instructions.

I observe in this connection that the Chief Resident Engineer in his letter of 21st September, 1907, to the Consulting Engineers states that he is endeavouring to "retain the powers he had under Sir M. Nathan of making appointments of men charged to works on his own authority and also of entering into petty contracts without reporting them for sanction", and he adds that "under the system now being forced upon him he can hardly do anything without reference and sanction".

These phrases appear to me (as I have said) as misleading to the Consulting Engineers as his representation of their proposals, to which I alluded in paragraph 8, was to myself.

At the request of the Local Auditor I directed the Chief Resident Engineer to notify appointments of other than labourers but no interference whatever has been made with his power of making such appointments. As regards petty contracts I find that these have never been made by the Chief Resident Engineer on the usual tender system, and that he denies power to increase the payment to the contractor.

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(or as soon as they are submitted) and I hope that it may result in some practical method of reducing office work while maintaining the control and supervision of expenditure which is required by Financial Instructions. I observe in this connection that the Chief Resident Engineer in his letter of 21st September, 1907, to the Consulting Engineers states that he is endeavouring to "retain the powers he had under Sir M. Nathan of making appointments of men charged to works on his own authority and also of entering into petty contracts without reporting them for sanction", and he adds that "under the system now being forced upon him he can hardly do anything without reference and sanction". These phrases appear to me (as I have said) as misleading to the Consulting Engineers as his representation of their proposals, to which I alluded in paragraph 8, was to myself. At the request of the Local Auditor I directed the Chief Resident Engineer to notify appointments of other than labourers but no interference whatever has been made with his power of making such appointments. As regards petty contracts I find that these have never been made by the Chief Resident Engineer on the usual tender system, and that he denies power to increase the payment to the contractor.
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་་་:|:་ལོ་ཡག་ཁ་ 17. 686 (or as soon as they are submitted) and I hope that it may result in some practical method of reducing office work while maintaining the control and supervision of expendi- -ture which is required by Financial Instructions. I observe in this connection that the Chief Resident Engineer in his letter of 21st. Sep- -tember, 1907, to the Consulting Engineers states that he is endeavouring to "retain the powers he had under Sir M. Nathan of making appointments of men charged to works on his own authority and also of entering into petty contracts without reporting them for sanction", and he - adds that "under the system now being forced upon him he can hardly do anything without reference and sanction". These phrases appear to me (as I have said) as misleading to the Consulting Engineers as his representation of their proposals, to which I alluded in paragraph 8, was to myself. At the request of the Local Auditor I directed the Chief Resident Engineer to notify appointments of other than labourers but no interference whatever has been made with his power of making such appointments. As regards petty contracts I find that these have never been made by the Chief Resident Engineer on the usual tender system, desires and that he denies powera to increase the payment to the contractor
2026-06-05 12:57:14 · Baseline
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་་་:|:་ལོ་ཡག་ཁ་

17.

686

(or as soon as they are submitted) and I hope that it may

result in some practical method of reducing office work

while maintaining the control and supervision of expendi-

-ture which is required by Financial Instructions.

I observe in this connection that

the Chief Resident Engineer in his letter of 21st. Sep-

-tember, 1907, to the Consulting Engineers states that he

is endeavouring to "retain the powers he had under Sir

M. Nathan of making appointments of men charged to works

on his own authority and also of entering into petty

contracts without reporting them for sanction", and he

- adds that "under the system now being forced upon him he

can hardly do anything without reference and sanction".

These phrases appear to me (as I have said) as misleading

to the Consulting Engineers as his representation of their

proposals, to which I alluded in paragraph 8, was to myself.

At the request of the Local Auditor I directed the Chief

Resident Engineer to notify appointments of other than

labourers but no interference whatever has been made with

his power of making such appointments. As regards petty

contracts I find that these have never been made by the

Chief Resident Engineer on the usual tender system,

desires

and

that he denies powera to increase the payment to the

contractor

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