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Lagos Assembly slashes perks for ex-governors by 50%

By Olawunmi Ojo, Gbenga Salau and Kehinde Olatunji
06 August 2021   |   3:08 am
Lagos State House of Assembly, yesterday, approved the report of its Committee on Establishment, which recommended the reduction of pensions to former governors and other officials by 50 per cent.

Chairman, APC Lagos Caretaker Committee, Tunde Balogun (left); Secretary to Lagos State Government, Folashade Jaji; Deputy Governor, Dr. Obafemi Hamzat; Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu; Commissioner for Local Government and Community Affairs, Dr. Wale Ahmed; Chairman, Bariga Local Council Development Area (LCDA) and National President, Association of Local Government of Nigeria (ALGON), Kolade Alabi and Chairman, House Committee on Local Government, Olawale Sobur, during the induction for chairmen of local councils and LCDAs in Lagos… yesterday.

State govt, council threaten to shut unregistered veterinary premises
• Sanwo-Olu tasks council chairmen on poverty reduction at grassroots

Lagos State House of Assembly, yesterday, approved the report of its Committee on Establishment, which recommended the reduction of pensions to former governors and other officials by 50 per cent.

The committee, which also expunged the provision of houses in Abuja and Lagos for former governors as stipulated in an earlier law operated by the state, further reduced the number of vehicles to be made available to former governors and their deputies.

Speaker of the House, Mudashiru Obasa, who suggested that former governors should get two vehicles (a car and a van) instead of three as recommended by the committee, urged that the amended bill should provide that the cars be changed every four years instead of the three years recommended by the report.

While some of the lawmakers, at plenary, had suggested an upward review of the pension for the affected public office holders by 75 per cent, others urged that the pension remains as stipulated in the old law.

However, Obasa argued that it should be left at 50 per cent, especially as the report had recommended the removal of houses and reduced other benefits.

He noted the argument of his colleagues that the projected downward review of the pension for the former governors and others could also be affected by inflation and other economic considerations but reminded them that the House must meet the wishes of the people, one of which is a cut in the cost of governance.

MEANWHILE, Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu has implored local councils and local council development areas (LCDAs) to create an economic agenda, as well as initiate innovative programmes that would alleviate poverty among people at the grassroots.

Sanwo-Olu, who gave the charge at a three-day induction retreat for the newly-elected chairmen of the councils and LCDAs in Lagos, yesterday, admonished the council bosses to think out of the box and create enabling environment for wealth creation among people at the grassroots.

In another development, the Lagos State Government and the Veterinary Council of Nigeria (VCN) have threatened to shut any unregistered veterinary practicing premises in Lagos if they fail to register with the VCN within the next 60 days.

The state’s Commissioner for Agriculture, Abisola Olusanya, and the President, VCN, AIG Aishatu Abubakar Baju, stated this when the state government inaugurated an 11-man Task Force on Veterinary Practice Premises in furtherance of its Red Meat Transformation Agenda.

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