Tag: Council

  • PR Council warns unregistered consultants

    The Public Relations Consultants Association of Nigeria (PRCAN) has warned unregistered Public Relations Consultants, who have set up PR practice, to get ready to be named and shamed.

    Rising from an extraordinary General Meeting in Lagos to discuss the state of PR Practice in Nigeria, the professional body warned all unregistered consultants and clients doing businesses with them to get ready for a legal showdown.

    Following a motion moved by the Chief Executive Officer of CMC Connect Burson-Marsteller, Mr. Yomi Badejo-Okusanya, members unanimously passed a vote of confidence on the present leadership of PRCAN, while praising them for partnering with the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) to step up the fight to rid the industry of quacks and unregistered PR Consultants.

    According to him: “PR is a profession regulated by law just like medicine and accountancy. The law regulating PR practice in Nigeria  is an Act of the Parliament. You cannot just wake up one morning in South Africa and decide to float a PR agency. No, it is never done and this will not be allowed here in Nigeria. We must take the battle to the gates of these unregistered professionals just like our colleagues in advertising have done.”

    Responding, the PRCAN President, John Ehiguese, thanked members for their unalloyed support, saying the PRCAN leadership will continue to work with the NIPR to ensure that the crusade is pursued to its logical conclusion.

    He reiterated the resolve of the association to engage other corporate bodies and government establishments still patronising the services of unregistered PR Consultants, assuring those who are qualified to practise PR of the readiness of the professional body to welcome them to its fold.

    The PRCAN President further assured all private and public sector organisations in need of PRCAN consultancy services that the professional circle is the right direction to look.

    He said: “This is a win-win situation for us and for all private and public sector clients, who need the services of PR consultancies. If any of our members is not living up to the standards expected by the clients, such clients should know that they can make a formal report to PRCAN and we will ensure they get their money’s worth in terms of best-in-class professional PR services. But we can only hold our registered members accountable for standards and not the unregistered army currently parading themselves about as PR consultants in Nigeria.”

    PRCAN and the NIPR have challenged MTN Nigeria and Guinness Plc for appointing unregistered PR firms as Public Relations Consultants.

  • Council sponsors 50 for WAEC exams

    The Isolo Local Council Development Area Executive Secretary, Jubril Olusegun, has presented 50 General Certificate of Education (GCE) forms to pupils in the area.

    Olusegun said the gesture was part of the council’s social responsibility to equip the youths for the future.

    He promised to organise coaching class for them.

    “When one has education, he has everything. I know this is going to be a plus for their parents and our council. I assure there will be a follow-up after their examinations for those who perform excellently,” he said.

    He appealed to the beneficiaries to see the gesture as a golden opportunity to pursue their life-time dream, urging them to be serious with their studies.

    The Council Manager, Mr Kehinde Yusuf, said the gesture was aimed at reducing the number of social miscreants in the community.

    “The issuance of GCE forms has always been part of the council’s activities but presently, there will be extensive coaching to ensure they succeed,” he said.

    The Head of Education Department, Mrs Olajumoke Akinyemi, said five pupils were randomly chosen from each ward.

    “I feel elated to be part of those helping these pupils. When you train a child, you train a nation. People should assist the less-privileged pupils, who are willing to study. Those selected should also make use of this opportunity,” she said.

    One of the beneficiaries, Olowode Funsho, thanked the council for relieving her parents the burden of purchasing the form.

  • Council organises workshop for teachers

    The Odi-Olowo/Ojuwoye Local Council Development Area has organised a two-day training workshop for teachers in its domain. The training followed the presentation free General Certificate of Education (GCE) forms to pupils in the area.

    The council’s Executive Secretary, Rasaq Ajala, said the workshop was in fulfilment of the promises made in making education the bedrock of his administration.

    Tagged the 21st century skills for classroom management, Ajala said the programme will ensure that teachers are equipped with 21st Century teaching techniques to enhance their productivity in shunning out pupils who will be good ambassadors and great scholars.

    He said his administration was poised to change the negative perception of youths of the area from every form of hooliganism and cultism.

    The facilitator of the workshop, Mrs Bisola Toriola, said: “Acquiring ‘the skills’ otherwise called ‘manipulatives” or “hands on”, would ensure that the teachers’ job is half way done.”

    Pupils, she said, will comprehend any subject taught faster.

    According to her, “the placement of hands on the table, using cardboards and scissors to cut and create, arrest the students’ attention. Learning to do it yourself will also bring out the ideas and creativity,  thereby making learning interesting and educating”.

  • Council poll: Aspirant denies quitting race

    A chairmanship aspirant at the Ojokoro Local Council Development Area (LCDA) in Lagos, Babatunde Okeyomi, has denied quitting the race.

    He described as rumours the news that he has opted out of the race.

    According to a statement signed by Okeyomi, (aka Carry-Go), the news was a figment of the imagination of those behind it.

    Addressing his supporters at Alakuko, the aspirant said he is well prepared for the job, adding that as a loyal and committed party member, he will not waiver in his commitment to ensure that his party wins the chairmanship seat in the area.

    He said: “Our respected party leaders, including Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola, had advised me, and other aspirants to avoid acrimonies and quarrels in our quest for any elective office, and I stand by that admonition.

    “As a loyal party member, and one who has invested so much into the development of Ojokoro community, I will always abide by the rules and regulations of our party; I won’t disappoint any of you, as I have mapped out my winning strategies, including getting the endorsement of our highly-respected party.”

    Some of the youths said their supports for Okeyomi were borne out of their conviction that he has good plans for the council.

    One of the youths, Kehinde Joseph, described Okeyomi as a “visionary and humane politician, who has been empowering us over the years; we will resist the imposition of any unpopular person.”

  • Ex-Lagos council boss loses father

    Ex-Lagos council boss loses father

    Former Chairman of Mosan-Okunola Local Council Development Area, Alhaji AbdulRasheed Abiodun Mafe has lost his father.

    The deceased, Alhaji Moshood Mafe Mayeleke, died last Friday and was buried the same day according to Islamic rites.

    The late Mayaleke’s remains were interred at Porogun near Ita-Osu in Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State.

    Before his demise, he was a community and a religious leader.

    Aged 96, the late Mayeleke was a successful businessman and commanded respects from the community.

    According to his son, Alhaji Mafe, the deceased was a devout Muslim, disciplinarian and very accommodating.

    Mafe said the Eight-day Fidau (Prayer) will hold on Thursday at Itayo Street, Porogun, Ita-Osu, Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State.

    “We’ve lost a loving father; a shrewd businessman. I will deeply miss his words of advice,” he said.

    The late Mayeleke was survived by children, grand children and great grand children.

  • Council distributes GCE forms  to students

    Council distributes GCE forms to students

    Determined to encourage those indigenous to Oriade Local Council Development Area (LCDA) to further their education, it has distributed the General Certificate of Examination (GCE) forms to over 100 deserving students of the council.

    Speaking during the distribution exercise, the Executive Secretary of the council, Hon. Bola Badmus-Olujobi assured that both the council and Lagos State Government are committed to providing quality education for all children of school age, even as she advised the students to be studious, obedient and respectful at all times.

    Noting that the council, in its wisdom purchased the forms to be given to the recipients free, she said the students were randomly drawn from different wards of the council for fairness and even representation.

    Expressing her worries that results of the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) and the General Certificate Examination (GCE) in recent time reveal great decline in the standard of the education sector, the council chief maintained that “it has manifested in the quality of our graduates that are churned out yearly from our universities and other institutions of higher learning. There is no need to argue that urgent steps need to be taken to reverse the trend.”

    Hon. Badmus-Olujobi stated that the presentation of the GCE forms to the beneficiaries was a manifestation of the council’s commitment to improve standard of education, provide opportunities for brilliant but indigent students to access quality education and generally to improve the educational content of the local government.

    Promising that the council will organise first-rate preparatory classes for GCE candidates and recipients of the council’s gesture, the council chief advised the beneficiaries to take their studies serious and comply with all rules and regulations governing all examinations. She further urged the students to “read your books and be committed to your academic careers so that you would excel in all your examinations.”

    Continuing, she said: “It’s natural that in an environment such as ours, students should be encouraged to realise their potential. Parents of some of the beneficiaries could not afford the cost of the GCE forms; and these are brilliant students. So, I think it’s necessary for the local government to help them. That informed our distribution of the forms to deserving students.”

    In a chat with Southwest Report after the event, Hon. Badmus-Olujobi said she is worried by the continued decline in education standard which results from students’ lack of interest in reading books, saying that the council is willing to set up coaching centres where students would be taught the art of reading and writing.

    On how to tackle the falling standard of education, the council chief advocated an encouragement of reading culture and enforcement of literary appreciation for all students, irrespective of their chosen areas of study as a way of inculcating in them the reading culture.

    “If children are encouraged to have interest in books and reading right from their formative years all through their primary, secondary and tertiary education years, our schools, especially the universities would produce quality graduates who will, in turn, help the country in her quest for socio-economic and technological development,” she said.

    While decrying the prevalence of examination malpractices in Nigerian schools, which, she said, resulted from students’ lack of interest in books and reading, Hon. Badmus-Olujobi, who was the Deputy Speaker of the Seventh Lagos State House of Assembly said lack of solid foundation in the area of reading and having interest in books has adversely affected the standard of education in our country, even as she said the remedy lay on government making literary appreciation an integral part of the school curriculum to give a fresh direction to the issue of reviving or rekindling the reading culture in our students and among Nigerians.

    She said: “This hue and cry about the falling standard of education which results from lack of interest in books and reading would be in the thrash can of history if government and the relevant agency and stakeholders saddled with the responsibility of moulding our future leaders should see it as an urgent challenge to redirect the mindset of our students by blocking all loopholes that make examination fraud to thrive, through serious emphasis on reading as part of our culture and the provision of books for students’ use.”

    Hon. Badmus-Olujobi hinted that should the passion for reading is sustained, students would excel in any field of study, be it the arts, economics, technical or scientific. She therefore urged government to urgently embark on fundamental reforms of our education system which touches on curriculum, teaching and learning.

    She advised parents to monitor their children’s’ activities and the kind of friends they keep.

    She said: “It is the duty of every parent to ensure that their children imbibe reading as culture. They should sit down with their children to read with and for them. It is unfortunate that these days most parents don’t spend quality time with their children to monitor their academic progress. The craze for materialism tend on the part of parents tends to trivialize the important parental function of bringing up children the right way.

    “Some parents do not care the kind of fiends their children keep. Some do not care about how their children spend their leisure time and the periods they watch television. These days, children are much more interested in watching television even late into the night and surfing on the net. There seems to be lack of parental guide on the kind of film to watch and what periods to do certain things. In such situation, it is logical that less and less time is being devoted to the book and reading.”

    “Government, parents, teachers and all stakeholders in education should take decisive steps to ensure that the future of the country is not populated by semi-illiterate individuals who will definitely impinge on the country’s quest for development,”

    She also advised government not to leave the provision of books to the parents alone but should provide schools and students with books on a regular basis, even as she said government should establish libraries in every primary and secondary schools and stock them with the relevant books.

  • Council to evacuate flood victims

    Ten thousand people are to be evacuated from 20 flood-prone communities in Wurno Local Government Area of Sokoto State.

    The Caretaker Chairman of the council, Alhaji Shehu Chacho, who addressed reporters yesterday in Wurno, the local government headquarters, said the affected communities included Gidan-Kamba, Gidan-Bango one and two, ‘Yar-Wurnoni, Gidan-Modu, Lahodu, Tunga, Barayara Zaki, Arba, Koliyal, among others.

    He said a meeting was convened to discuss the planned release of excess water from the Goronyo dam by the Sokoto Rima River Basin Development Authority (SRBDA).

    According to him, the need to evacuate residents was a proactive measure to minimise destruction, adding: “The people in these communities have to be evacuated to primary schools, government quarters and other government buildings.

    “This action becomes necessary to prevent the loss of lives and property.”

  • Council lifts elderly

    Council lifts elderly

    Apapa-Iganmu Local Council Development Area has donated cash and gifts to the aged and elderly citizens in the area.

    The beneficiaries also underwent free medical screening.

    The council’s Executive Secretary, Mrs Oluwafunmilayo Akande-Muhammed, promised to continue the exercise.

    She said: “It will be sustained and whatever is given now is just a token of our love for you and the desire to cater for your welfare.

    “The scheme is designed to recognise our old ones who have reservoir of knowledge and wisdom as they have seen a lot in life and should be made happy to pass such to the upcoming leaders of tomorrow. Being elderly is a blessing and not a curse. I want our senior citizens to treasure their lives. Senior citizens still play a big role, as they have been doing, in bringing up children, hence the old needs to be recognised”.

    All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain Alhaji Adebayo Sarumi hailed the council chief for the initiative.

    “It is not only the benefits given to the people that matters, but the way she has been transforming the area to enhance people’s belief that democracy truly works,” Sarumi said.

    One of the beneficiaries, Emmanuel Olushola, thanked the council for the gifts.

  • Council chair backs four education varsities

    The Chairman of Governing Council of Alvan Ikoku University of Education, Owerri John Olawole Fasogbon, has said the establishment of six specialised universities by immediate past President Goodluck Jonathan is in line with the current international trend of developing specialised universities for enhancement of professionalism for quality human capital development.

    Speaking against the misconception about specialised universities, which include  Maritime University, Okerenkoko, Delta State; Medical Sciences University, Otukpo, Benue State; and four federal fniversities of Education (Kano, Ondo, Owerri, and Zaria), Fasogbon said specialty universities have now become the norms in the world to foster quality education.

    Fasogbon contested the submission by some that degrees in education and teaching did not require specialised universities, saying first degree has since become the minimum qualification for teaching even at the basic level in advanced countries.

    Fashogbon noted that converting colleges of education awarding the Nigeria Certificate of Education (NCE) into universities of education and losing their NCE programmes would not affect teachers’ education. He said Nigeria has reached a stage where a degree in education should be the benchmark for teaching.

    He said the conversion of four colleges of education would not only give admission seekers opportunity for university education, but profit host communities of the aforementioned institutions.

    Fasogbon called on governors of the states where the specialised institutions are cited to wade in towards their financial sustenance.

    Fasogbon, who urged federal government not to reverse the status of the institutions, said if given a chance, they (universities) will play a role in positioning the nation’s education to meet international standard.

    He said: “The new Federal universities of education are already on the federal budget line. The same funding can be maximised to run the universities during the transition period in terms of recurrent expenditure, while the expected increase in the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) allocations continue to be utilised for the capital project requirements. Indeed, in terms of salaries, the earnings of staff of FCEs is already almost favourably comparable to the university staff salaries.”

    Fashogbon added: “Out of 1.5 million Nigeria students that sat for universities’ post UTME now, only 200, 000 would be offered admission, so the only antidote for the remaining students is the newly created universities of education to complement the 46 federal universities.

     

  • Council, motorcyclists  brainstorm on safety

    Council, motorcyclists brainstorm on safety

    The Executive Secretary of Badagry West Local Council Development Area of Lagos State, Hon Joseph A. Agoro has said that despite some negative impressions resulting from some untoward behaviour of motorcycle operators, popularly known as okada, their immense contributions to the socio-economic development of the society cannot be overlooked.

    Hon. Agoro spoke during a stakeholders’ meeting held at the council’s secretariat on Friday. The meeting was organised with a view to ensuring that motorcycle operations, especially in the council area are devoid of the usual skirmishes.

    He noted that okada riders are significant contributors to economic growth and development of the society, even as he added that their somewhat awkward behaviours tend to rob them of such significance.

    Describing them as gap-fillers, Hon. Agoro noted that the crumbling of public intra-city transport system and poor road network paved way for the ingenious introduction of motorcycle transport system as means of public transportation in Nigeria.

    He added that it is patronised by the low and mighty because of the advantages it has over taxis and buses. Its use for commercial purposes has impacted significantly on the economy and society.

    The council chief revealed that the stakeholders’ meeting with okada riders aimed at fashioning a better way of doing the business of motorcycle operation devoid of the usual problems engendered by the operators.

    “The essence of this meeting is to ensure a peaceful relationship between okada riders and other road users in Badagry West Local Council Development Area.

    The increase in crime has been linked with the influx of okada riders, particularly in the cities closer to the border. The criminal activities by okada riders range from theft of purses and mobile phones to abduction, grand larceny and even politically-motivated murder.

    “It is pertinent to maintain some standard in order to reduce the number of deaths and injuries resulting from careless operation of motorcycles. Apart from other factors such as overloading, speeding, indulgence in alcohol and lack of training in safety matters, among others, there have also been incidents of gang beating, during which okada riders had attacked motorists as a result of minor traffic accidents involving both parties.

    “There had been serious clashes involving okada riders and other road users. Some of these clashes, sometimes, escalate into riots during which vehicles were set ablaze,” he said. Continuing, he said: “There is no secrecy about what is needed to be done to keep okada riders safe. I, therefore, call on all stakeholders who gathered here today to brainstorm on how best to make motorcycle operation less dangerous and less life-threatening in the council area as we experience it currently.

    “In this respect, I therefore advise all motorcycle operators to be of good behaviour, show respect to security agents and also to be law-abiding citizens. In case of any misunderstanding, do not take the laws into your own hands; report to the council for redress. We will always attend to your needs.”