Latest news with #DAGS

Zawya
10-07-2025
- Business
- Zawya
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) holds sensitization session on procurement standard documents to strengthen compliance and operational coherence across institutions
The Directorate of Administration and General Services is currently holding a three-day sensitization meeting on ECOWAS Procurement Standard Documents (the Procurement Code / Manual; Grant Code / Manual, and various Annexes thereof), which are strategic documents intended to ensure consistent interpretation of the documents and their proper application in alignment with international and donor-compliant procurement practices. The Sensitization exercise is to engender clear, uniform understanding and application of the procurement standard documents during procurement processes whilst promoting clarity of Roles, Responsibilities, and Standard Timelines throughout the procurement standard document cycle. For enhanced synergy in the ECOWAS procurement chain across all ECOWAS Institutions, and Offices, participants in this important session include officers/stakeholders from the ECOWAS Commission (Directorates of Finance – B&T / FR&G – ITS, Legal Affairs, Human Resources, Infrastructure); Office of the Auditor-General, Parliament, Court of Justice, WAHO, GIABA); Agencies (ARAA, RCDC, PPDU, ECREEE, Gender Center, Water Resources). The meeting was declared open by the Commissioner for Internal Services (CIS) and moderated by the Director of Administration and General Services (DAGS). Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).
Yahoo
03-04-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Hawaiʻi's Eternal Flame Memorial burns once again
HONOLULU (KHON2) — After nearly a week of work, the flame in the Eternal Flame Memorial is burning once again. Army removes, reposts website documenting Japanese-American WWII soldiers On Friday, March 28, the Department of Accounting and General Services announced the flame was temporarily out due to a blocked gas line, something they said is a rare occurrence. Even though the blocked line did not pose a threat to the public's safety, state officials turned off the gas for the time being. After further investigation, officials determined that the interior of the copper tubing had flaked off, causing a blockage and preventing gas flow from reaching the from DAGS and Hawai'i Gas Co. worked tirelessly to remove the copper tubing and replace it with a 3/4″ galvanized pipe. 'DAGS credits Hawaiʻi Gas for working quickly alongside our crew to ensure the memorial works properly to best honor the memory of the military service members the flame burns for.' DAGS Director and Comptroller Keith Regan reminds the public that the Eternal Flame burns in remembrance of the Dec. 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor and honors those who lost their lives defending our freedom. Check out more news from around Hawaii The sculpture was created by Kaua'i sculptor Bumpei Akaji, a 442nd Regimental Combat Team veteran and is part of the collection of the Hawai'i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
14-03-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Hawaii officials preparing for tariff effects on construction
HONOLULU (KHON2) — State officials are closely monitoring the potential local impacts of tariffs, especially on construction. The Department of Accounting and General Services said some projects may have to reduce their scope to stay on budget. How tariffs could impact Hawaii DAGS' budget for current projects in design is about $1.8 billion and that budget can not change, but costs will have to be cut if if national-level tariffs increase the price of local goods. 'So always our first choice when we have to cut costs is to cut the scope of the project. Typically, our projects are sized to provide the spaces necessary to provide services to the people of Hawaii,' said DAGS Public Works administrator Gordon Wood. The director of DAGS said tariffs on steel and aluminum could have the most severe impact on local construction — especially projects that are not yet in the construction phase. Get news on the go with KHON 2GO, KHON's morning podcast, every morning at 8 It is not clear when prices could spike. 'That's a really great question. I think that's the billion dollar question, right. As it relates to tariffs and how it's going to impact us. We simply don't know. Right? Because until something is finalized and, you know, the tariffs are either in play or they're not in play, really speaks to that question,' said DAGS comptroller Keith Regan. Supporters of the Trump Administration policy argue that tariffs would be reciprocal and an example of fair trade. What are tariffs and how do they work? 'So what you charge us, we'll charge you. That's fair trade. If they want it to be free trade, which would be ideal for everyone, then they should remove their tariffs on us,' said House Minority Floor Leader Rep. Diamond Garcia. 'Foreign companies from across the globe is now moving to America to invest and build and operate. That's good for America's economy.' DAGS added that planned, large-scale projects like a new prison on Oahu and a new Aloha Stadium will require a lot of metal products and it is a wait-and-see game to learn about impacts on those. 'We're already struggling with the budget on that and there's going to be a lot of steel there,' Wood said, 'even the new stadium there will be a lot of steel and so as the prices of materials go up, that stadium is going to get smaller.' Download the free KHON2 app for iOS or Android to stay informed on the latest news 'There's a track record. President Trump served for four years previously and he implemented tariffs and the economy did not suffer the way that the media currently is painting it out to be,' said Rep. Diamond Garcia. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.