Tag: Federal Civil Service Commission (FCSC)

  • FCSC to deepen evaluation, monitoring practice in public service

    FCSC to deepen evaluation, monitoring practice in public service

    The Federal Civil Service Commission (FCSC) has restated its commitment to strengthening reforms that will deepen evaluation and monitoring (E&M) practice in the nation’s public service.

    The commission’s Chairman, Prof. Tunji Olaopa, spoke at the national symposium of the Nigerian Association of Evaluators (NAE) yesterday in Abuja.

    In a goodwill message, Olaopa noted that an effective practice of evaluation and monitoring is crucial to national development, stressing that it should be strongly embedded in the operations of public service.

    The FCSC chairman stated that from the perspective of the FCSC, as the institution charged with appointments, promotions and discipline within the Federal Civil Service, the implications of evaluation and monitoring are clear.

    According to him, a functional national M&E system requires not only systems and tools, but a professional workforce equipped with the right skills, values, and incentives.

    He added that the experience of the FCSC had shown that many of the barriers affecting M&E practice lie in the human resource environment: unclear job roles, lack of competency frameworks, weak alignment of recruitment with the organisation’s values, inconsistent career pathways, limited recognition of analytical skills in promotion assessments, and posting practices that disrupt continuity and institutional memory.

    Olaopa stressed that in response to these, the commission had begun moves for reforms that strengthen M&E capacity across the public service.

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    “We believe that establishing standardised job descriptions for monitoring and evaluation officers will create greater clarity and consistency across MDAs. The development of competency frameworks aligned with global evaluation standards will help define the technical and ethical expectations for officers engaged in evaluative work. Clearer career pathways will improve motivation and retention, while better recruitment alignment will ensure that individuals with backgrounds in evaluation, statistics, data science, planning or social research enter roles suited to their expertise. Furthermore, integrating evaluative competence into promotion assessments will reinforce the culture of evidence we seek to build. And finally, stabilising postings for officers in M&E roles will help strengthen institutional knowledge and reporting continuity,” he said.

    Acknowledging the NAE as a strategic partner in this regard, Olaopa said that its experience in building evaluation standards, promoting ethical practice, and supporting capacity development made it “a natural ally as we seek to professionalise the evaluation function within the civil service”. He added: “We look forward to working with you to refine competency frameworks, strengthen ethical guidelines, deepen training opportunities, and build communities of practice that encourage learning and knowledge exchange.”

    According to him, if Nigeria is to achieve its development aspirations, stakeholders must collectively reimagine how they plan, implement, monitor, and evaluate programmes. They must bridge the gaps between policy and practice, strengthen the capabilities of institutions, improve the coherence of data systems, and cultivate a professional workforce anchored on integrity, analytical rigour, and commitment to results.

    Olaopa also said: “Only then can we build a public service that delivers effectively and consistently for the Nigerian people,” he said.

    Earlier, Olaopa noted that at a time public expectations of government were rightfully increasing, the work of the NAE had become central to improving public sector performance and strengthening accountability across the federation.

    The FCSC chairman described monitoring and evaluation as some of the most vital functions in modern public administration worldwide.

    “As governments broaden their portfolios, undertake ambitious national development initiatives, and implement complex sectoral reforms, the importance of reliable data and objective assessments grows. No country can achieve significant results for its citizens without clear performance indicators, nor can any government reach its objectives without mechanisms that identify what is succeeding, what is failing, and what needs to be changed. In this context, M&E is not merely a technical task but the core of effective governance,” he said.

    But the FCSC chairman regretted that though Nigeria has recorded huge strides in strengthening institutional frameworks, it was clear that significant structural challenges still remained.

    “One of the issues that continues to concern me deeply is the persistent disconnect between our national plans and the realities of programme implementation. Too often, policies are developed by planners and technical experts in one part of government, while implementation rests with MDAs that may not have been fully involved in the design process or adequately prepared for the responsibilities placed upon them. This siloed approach weakens programme effectiveness, because implementation planning is sometimes insufficient, key performance indicators do not always flow from a coherent results framework, and MDAs’ institutional readiness is not systematically assessed before programmes commence,” Olaopa added.

  • Buhari swears in commissioners in FCSC

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday swore in the Chairman and 12 Commissioners of the Federal Civil Service Commission (FCSC) at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    He charged them to address all obstacles inimical to the image of the service.

    The President also enjoined them to tackle issues detrimental to effective service delivery by the nation’s civil service

    The civil service, he said, must be re-positioned to enable it discharge its assigned responsibilities for efficient implementation of government policies.

    He said “In recent times government has observed some developments that are inimical to the image of the service and detrimental to efficient delivery of its responsibilities.

    “The Federal Civil Service must therefore be repositioned to enable it fulfills role in honestly executing government policies.

    “Considering your respective backgrounds your appointments were predicated on your wealth of public service experience.

    “I, therefore, have no doubt that you are equipped to reposition the civil service to respond efficiently and professionally to its responsibilities.

    “In this regard, you must ensure that government’s recruitment drive is conducted in a transparent and fair manner to attract the appropriate capacity of skilled personnel to the civil service while maintaining and motivating new recruits,’’ he said.

    Read Also: Buhari to politicians: Don’t politicize religion in Nigeria

    He stressed that the civil service is saddled with the onerous responsibility to formulate and implement policies and programmes of government through which benefits of governance are delivered to the citizenry.

    He said the civil service had remained a central institution to any government and the engine room for helping the executive to deliver good governance.

    “It must therefore put in place a sound system for appointments, promotions and discipline of personnel that will respond to the direction of government,’’ he added.

    President Buhari reminded the chairman and the commissioners of the three cardinal objectives of his administration, which he said included security, improve economic and fight against corruption.

    He, therefore, charged them to support initiatives aimed at delivering on these and shun practices that run counter to the delivery of the set objectives.

    He congratulated the chairman and the commissioners for their appointments to perform roles most critical to the success of the government.

    The chairman of the FCSC, Alhaji Yakubu Ingawa, who spoke to State House correspondents after the swearing in ceremony, pledged that the new members would discharge their responsibilities diligently.

    Those sworn in along with the chairman included Mr Moses Ngbale from Adamawa; Waziri Ngurno from Borno; ; Aminu Sheidu fromKogi; Simon Etim from Akwa Ibom andBello Mahmoud from Jigawa.

    Others were Ahmed Sarna from Kebbi; Iyabode Odulate-Yusuf from Ogun; Shehu Danyaya from Niger; Fatai Adebayo from Oyo; Ejoh Chukwuemeka from Anambra; Joe Poroma from Rivers and Ibrahim Mohammed from Kaduna.

  • FG announces massive vacancies nationwide

    FG announces massive vacancies nationwide

    The Federal Civil Service Commission of Nigeria (FCSC) on Thursday announced nationwide vacancies into various Ministries Departments and Agencies (MDAs).

    All qualified Nigerians who currently hold an OND, HND or the BA/BSc are advised to apply on the commission’s website

    According to the FCSC in a statement released to newsmen in Abuja, location includes Abia, Abuja, Adamawa, Akwa Ibom, Anambra, Bauchi, Bayelsa, Benue, Borno, Cross River, Delta, Ebonyi, Edo, Ekiti, Enugu, Gombe, Imo, Jigawa, Kaduna, Kano, Katsina, Kebbi, Kogi, Kwara, Lagos, Nassarawa, Niger, Ogun, Ondo, Osun, Oyo, Plateau, Rivers, Sokoto, Taraba, Yobe, Zamfara Job Field Administration / Secretarial General.

    The statement redas in part: “The Federal Civil Service Commission (FCSC) wishes to announce vacancies in the following MDAs:

    (i) Federal Ministry of Information;
    (ii) Federal Ministry of Environment;
    (iii) Federal Ministry of Justice;
    (iv) Federal Ministry of Trade and Investments; and
    (v) Bureau of Public Procurement.

    Job Type: Full Time
    Qualification: OND, HND, BA/BSc.

    How to Apply:
    Qualified Applicants can access Application Forms on-line on FCSC Website:www.fedcivilservice.gov.ng.

    Collect FCSC Forms from Chairmen of the States Civil Service Commissions in the Following Geo-political Zones:
    (a) North-West (Kaduna);
    (b) North-East (Yola);
    (c) North-Central & Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Mabushi (Abuja);
    (d) South-East (Owerri);
    (e) South-South (Port Harcourt);
    (f) South-West (Ibadan).

    FCSC Headquarters, 4 Abidjan Street, Wuse Zone 3, Abuja.

    For avoidance of doubt, the application form is free. Completed Application Forms must be submitted where collected on or not later than six (6) Weeks from the date of this Publication (Advertisement).

    All Application Forms should be submitted in a sealed envelope clearly stating the Ministry, the post applied for and addressed to the: Hon. Chairman, Federal Civil Service Commission,4 Abidjan Street, Wuse Zone 3, Abuja.

    The FCSC is an executive body in Nigeria that has the authority to make appointments and transfers and to exercise disciplinary control over all Federal Civil Servants.No officer can be appointed into the Civil Service without authorization from the Federal Civil Service Commission if they have been convicted of a crime, or had previously been employed in the Government Service and had been dismissed or asked to resign or retire

  • Secret employment: Senate summons Federal Civil Service boss

    Secret employment: Senate summons Federal Civil Service boss

    The Senate on Wednesday invited the Chairman, Federal Civil Service Commission (FCSC) Mrs Joan Ayo, to brief it over increasing allegations of secret employment by Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) in the country.
     
    The upper chamber said that it is worried over the unending allegations that MDAs were clandestinely carrying out employments without due process.
     
    Senate Committee on Federal Character and Inter-Governmental Affairs said that the decision to invite the FCSC boss was taken after its oversight visit to the headquarters of the Federal Character Commission (FCC) in Abuja.
     
    Acting Executive Chairman of FCC, Shettima Bukar Abba, was said to have lamented that government agencies have failed in their responsibilities to comply with the federal character principles. 
     
    Abba was also said to have disclosed that efforts by the FCC to get the FCSC to comply with the federal character principle as well as discourage secret employment in government agencies were being frustrated by denial of the FCSC boss.
     
    Abba was said to have added that MDAs skew projects in the budget based on regional sentiments against an even distribution of projects as required by the principle of federal character. 
     
    The FCC boss was said to have told Senators that the unfortunate development, which was fast becoming a norm, was severally challenged in the past by the FCC, but to no avail.
     
    He appealed for the support of the National Assembly, “because the commission needs its protection against erring government agencies.” 
     
    Abba said: “There is an issue I need to draw your attention to as well. Distribution of projects in the annual budget ought to be in compliance with the federal character principle. So far, you find that this has not been the case as it is skewed to favour one part at the expense of another.
     
    “As legislators, I think you should watch out for this by ensuring that projects are not skewed to favour a particular section of the country.
     
    “Also, I must add that in order to realise this, lawmakers should protect us (FCC) against MDAs in ensuring that the principle of federal character is maintained in drafting budget proposals.
     
    “If they (MDAs) bring out their budget, their proposals must be balanced. They put in areas not based on the needs of people but based on sentiments. These are some of the issues we want your support on, since we believe it is what will keep this country together.” 
     
    Chairman, Senate Committee on Federal Character, Senator Tijjani Yahaya Kaura, in his ruling noted that following concerns raised by the Acting Chairman FCC, it became a necessary invite the FCSC boss to brief the Senate on the issues raised by FCC boss.
     
    He noted that the FCSC boss should also be expected to throw light on her alleged failure to adhere to the provisions of federal character principles. 
     
    The Zamfara North Senatorial District assured the FCC of the Senate’s support saying, “It is because of our directive for submission of nominal rolls that is why government agencies are now rushing to you (FCC). We want to assure you that the National Assembly will stand by you and give you all the necessary support to succeed.” 
  • FG appoints acting Auditor-General of Federation

    The Federal Civil Service Commission (FCSC) on Tuesday approved the appointment of Mrs Florence Anyanwu as the acting Auditor-General of the Federation (AuGF).

    This is contained in a statement issued by Mrs Olawunmi Ogunmosunle, the Chief Press Secretary, Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation in Abuja.

    It said that Anyanwu took over in acting capacity due to the retirement of Mr Samuel Ukura, who attained the mandatory age of 60 years on June 5, 2016.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the Secretary to the Government of the Federation had directed the FCSC to appoint an acting AuGF, pending the appointment of a substantive one within three months.

    “Mrs Florence Anyanwu was the Director of Audit in-charge of Legislature, Judiciary and Security Agencies Department of the Office of the Auditor-General for the Federation, Nigeria.

    “She has more than 32 years’ experience as a professional auditor. She joined the OAuGF in 1984 as Auditor 1, and became Director of Audit in 2011.

    “She earned her membership of the Association of National Accountants of Nigeria in 2004 and was conferred a fellow in 2013.

    “She is also a member of Chartered Institute of Taxation Nigeria, 2011, and Nigeria Institute of Management in 2004,” it said.