In a push to strengthen transparent public resource management across Haiti’s government institutions, Haiti’s National Public Procurement Commission (CNMP) has launched a three-day specialized training program focused on core public procurement fundamentals, designed exclusively for senior technical staff at the country’s Ministry of National Education and Vocational Training (MENFP).
The training kicked off on Friday, June 19, 2026, with sessions scheduled across three non-consecutive Fridays: June 19, June 26, and July 3, 2026. Around 20 participants are taking part in the program, most of whom are members of MENFP’s newly established ministerial public procurement commission (CMMP) and senior leadership from the ministry’s Procurement Implementation Unit (UPM).
The curriculum covers a broad range of critical topics aligned with Haiti’s evolving public procurement framework. Key modules include a deep dive into the country’s legal and regulatory structure governing public contracts, step-by-step guidance on procurement solicitation, monitoring, and contract execution processes, and a breakdown of special regulatory frameworks for different contract types, including client service contracts, supply contracts, and contracts issued during officially declared public emergencies. To ensure participants can apply new skills in real-world scenarios, the program also includes hands-on practical case study analysis, procedural simulation exercises, and applied problem-solving activities built to boost frontline operational capacity.
Speaking at the official opening of the training, CNMP commissioner Elgo Eugène welcomed MENFP’s recent decision to establish an in-house public procurement commission, a move the CNMP actively encourages. Eugène emphasized the central role that well-regulated public procurement plays in upholding transparency in public sector management. “This work is essential to guarantee consistency, full traceability, and above all, credibility for our entire national procurement system,” he told attendees.
The new MENFP CMMP, formally established on June 1, 2026, comprises five appointed members: Lutherking Emmanuel MARCADIEU, Jean Astrel MAGLOIRE, Myrlène Jean-Baptiste SÉIDE, Rigaud MATHURIN, and Ardine PLAISIR.
Woodly Simon, Chief of Staff to MENFP Minister Vijonet Déméro, framed effective public procurement as a core lever of functional public action. “At the ministry, transparent, efficient, rule-compliant management is non-negotiable to ensure we get the most value out of every public resource,” Simon explained. He added that upskilling the ministry’s procurement leadership is a strategic investment that will improve activity planning, streamline program execution, and advance responsible stewardship of public funds.
Lead trainer Marie Aurore Élisabeth Barthélemy Dalencourt further emphasized the broader societal and economic impact of well-managed public procurement. “When public procurement is governed by the principles of transparency, equity, and efficiency, it directly strengthens good governance and improves the quality of services delivered to all Haitian citizens,” she said. “Every actor involved in public contracting has a responsibility to uphold regulatory standards and best practices to ensure public resources are used to their maximum potential.”
