Tag: Housing

  • ‘Jail Ekiti housing boss’

    Residents and house owners in Irewolede (Fajuyi) Estate in Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, have asked the State High Court in Ado-Ekiti to jail the General Manager of Ekiti Housing Corporation, Babasoji Awe, for alleged contempt of court.

    The house owners/claimants went to court, challenging the revocation of their houses purchased on a mortgage agreement but which Governor Ayodele Fayose wanted paid within a month.

    The plaintiffs claimed in the contempt charge that Awe, a lawyer, was duly served.

    Their counsel, Rafiu Balogun, said his clients have begun the suit vide a Writ of Summons and accompanied with other processes and documents and the defendants were duly served.

    “The second defendant (Awe) has served the house owners with the letters of revocation, and shamefully and with impunity, they were given seven days to vacate their respective houses,” Balogun said.

    Pleading with the court to act in defence of justice, Balogun noted: “We all know what is going to happen after the expiration of the seven days ultimatum; the government will forcefully eject them against the spirit and the intendment of the pending matter.

    “This is an affront to the rule of law and a despicable attempt to foist a fait accompli on court and that must not be allowed to happen again in this country.”

  • Wanted: Enactment of a Housing Act

    Wanted: Enactment of a Housing Act

    The deficit in housing requirement is  growing at an alarming rate. It stands at  5.8 per cent per year, with its attendant effects on major cities, such as Lagos, Abuja, Kano and Port Harcourt. This has given rise to slum population estimated at about 70 per cent. While some experts and stakeholders insist on an enactment of a “Housing Act” to solve the problem, others say funding is the solution. However, the middle point is that the vicious cycle may just continue unabated if drastic measures are not taken, write MUYIWA LUCAS and JANE CHIJIOKE

    It was not an unusual gathering, considering that it held in the precints of a citadel of learning. It was the inaugural lecture of Prof. Timothy Nubi, a lecturer in the Housing and Urban Regeneration Department of the University of Lagos (UNILAG).

    The theme: “Beyond bricks and mortar” naturally, would elicit interest, especially considering the 17 million estimated deficit being experienced in housing. And when the figures were reeled out, not many agreed less on the urgency of the state of housing in the country.

    “In Nigeria, the slum population is put at 70 per cent with a higher annual growth rate of 4.55 per cent. The widespread development of slums in our towns and cities is a physical manifestation of poverty in its entire ramification. As stagnant water is to mosquitoes, so are slums to criminal activities. Our lack of understanding in this regard has led to government frustration and wrong policy shift to private sector driven provision for basic social needs even when people cannot pay for these services,” began Nubi.

    According to him, in developing countries, the emphasis on private ownership of houses has reduced the importance of government participation even as needs escalate and private sector participation yielding lesser impact than expected. This situation has made access to adequate and affordable housing remain a huge challenge to both dwellers in urban and rural areas.

    Now, to tackle this malaise, the University don said there is a need for the creation of a workable mortgage system to tackle the difficulty of housing provision in the country. This plan, he said, should engage the public sector as against the current system that has left housing in the hands of the private sectors. Besides, government, he explained, should make consistent housing policies based on elements drawn from the developed countries, whose policies have produced massive, positive outcomes, since the early 1930s when such countries have put in place effective mortgage plans.

    “About 60 per cent of the present population of over 167 million lack adequate housing in Nigeria. Current housing deficit is about 16million units. Housing inadequacy is felt more by the less privileged groups (low income earners, the displaced, youth, elderly, physically challenged), even the middle class have started to feel the pain of the acute housing shortage. The current deficiency, in addition to projected demography trends, points to the need for several million housing units to be built across the country in the coming years,” he said.

    Nubi, who reiterated that it is a necessity for government to ensure that every Nigerian is sheltered, believed that a Housing Act should also be passed to make this mandatory. According to him, when this is done, it then becomes compulsory for government to be alive to this responsibility.

    The Act, he canvassed, should specify the age at which a Nigerian can get his own house and the quality of housing. “We have a building code, which should be an important part of the Act; the building code has not become law, but it should be made an important component of the Act,” he canvassed.

    Similarly, the Principal Partner, Kola Akomolede & Co., a firm of estate surveying and valuation, Chief Kola Akomolede, agreed that if enacted, the Housing Act would strengthen the housing sector. This, he argued, is because any government that fails to obey the Act can now be prosecuted.

    This position may be right given that the provisions of the National Housing Fund (NHF), has been flouted many times simply because it is not an Act. The NHF policy, which makes provision for the local and state governments to contribute a certain amount into the housing fund scheme and make workers pay a certain percentage of their salaries into the fund, has not been very effective since it was not passed as an Act like that of taxation.

    “The housing policy is very robust and is so large for every government to execute; if the housing policies and the building code are put together and we are able to back them as a law, when there is violation, it will be addressed in court. And the court will force the government to implement the law; it is a stage in any national development. There must be a law before it can be enforced,” he explained.

    But a former Federal Controller, Federal Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Mr. Olayinka Onaeko, saw it differently. He insisted that the country needed more funding than laws to bridge the housing gap.

    “As far as I am concerned, we don’t have problems of laws or statutory problems. The problem with housing is funding and not relevant laws; we have more than enough laws, Acts and policies in the housing sector that are relative to housing provision,” he argued, insisting that the Land Use Act and National Building Code, among others, were all statutory laws for housing.

    Putting another law in place, he argued, is tantamont to duplication, which may not necessarily improve the number of housing units or reduce the deficit in the sector. The major problem for the sector, according to him, is funding, which he said can be resolved by repositioning the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN) and other primary mortgage institutions (PMI).

    In planning laws, construction standards, housing finance vehicles, availability of legal, fiscal and physical infrastructure among others, the professor opined that the private sector is heavily dependent on the existence of a public sector for efficient operations, as privatisation might not work if housing funds are left in the hands of profit driven private sectors.

    “The crucial question seems to be ‘can the private sector operate in all housing submarkets?’ Does policy transfer recognise that private sector participation is taken for granted in some submarkets and carefully avoided in others? Is it recognised that policy transfer in housing sub markets fails where the policy allots market function to actors that are neither suitable nor willing to operate in that sub market?”he asked.

    Nubi, while proffering solution to the seeming increase in shortfall in housing, argued that a mass housing provision should be made available. He contended that such step would account for a significant portion of annual Gross Domestic Product (GDP), as it is capable of triggering the creation of micro and small scale businesses in such low income neighborhoods. He added that the desire for home ownership motivates savings, investment and means for generating extra income from rentals.

    Already, the private sector has since begun to key into the provision of mass housing. For instance, a frontline manufacturer of polyurethane prefabricated buildings in Nigeria, Vitapur Nigeria Limited, is seeking partnership with the Federal and state governments to bridge the country’s estimated 17 million units of housing deficit in the country, by constructing mass houses at low cost and high speed.

    “With the enabling environment in place, we are ready to assist in reducing building shortfall in Nigeria. Such an enabling environment will include available policy on land, housing, finance, affordable building materials, appropriate institutional framework and sustainable construction workforce. Government should create a platform for long and short term fund for real estate and establish infrastructure development bank,” Vitapur’s Acting Managing Director, Mr. Akin Oladiran, assured.

    Also a private firm, B. A. M. Projects & Properties has promised to build and deliver 500 assorted affordable housing units in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). This is part of the Federal Government’s sustained efforts at bridging the huge housing gap in the country. The project located at BELHAM Estate in Karsana District near Gwarimpa Housing Estate, is being developed on a 45-hectare of land. The units are: two-bedroom apartments, three-bedroom town houses, three-bedroom luxurious apartments,  four-bedroom detached bungalows and five-bedroom villas.

    Similarly, some states in the country are leaving no stone unturned. For instance, the Ogun State government has unveiled its housing plan that would enable residents, irrespective of their state of origin, to own personal home seamlessly within a short time.

    The Managing Director, Ogun State Property and Investment Corporation (OPIC), the business arm of the state government, Babajide Odusolu, said the scheme is targetted at “career persons in paid employment.”

    The scheme, christened “OPIC Advantage Home Purchase Plan” will make housing not only affordable, but make subscribers move into the home of their choice upon payment of initial 30 per cent of the total cost of the house. This is a “quasi – rent – own house” arrangement where subscriber would be required to pay monthly, quarterly or yearly rent while living inside, but with a mandate to liquidate the full cost of the house in three years. OPIC, in its 25 years of existence, has built 100 housing units.

    Also, to make home ownership less problematic, the mortgage system is becoming more robust. And to make the process easier, especially for people in the informal sector, or those not captured under the National Housing Fund (NHF), the Federal Housing Authority (FHA), through its social and co-operative housing programme, is opening up more windows of opportunities for the people.

  • Ekiti disburses N144m vehicle/housing loans to teachers

    •Govt vows to demolish illegal structures

    Ekiti State Government has disbursed N144 million as vehicle and housing loans to 712 teaching and non-teaching workers in public schools.

    Commissioner for Finance and Economic Development Toyin Ojo, who said this in Ado Ekiti at the weekend, added that N63 million of the amount was disbursed as car loans to 257 teaching and non-teaching personnel according to their grade levels.

    He explained that the vehicle loans range from N250, 000 to N1million for benefitting teachers on grade Level 7 to 16. Junior non-teaching staff from Grade Level 1 to 6  received  N70, 000.

    Ojo said the balance of N81million was disbursed as first and second tranche of housing loans to 455 teaching and non-teaching workers.

    He noted that Governor Ayo Fayose had last month approved the disbursement of N119 million as car loans to 623 workers in the state public service in spite of the prevailing paucity of funds.

    The commissioner explained that the gesture would reduce the burden of obtaining bank loans with its attendant high interest rate among the beneficiaries.

    He assured that the exercise would be continuous, saying that all interested teachers would benefit from the schemes.

    The state government has served a notice to demolish all ‘illegal attachments’ to shops in all markets in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital.

    Commissioner for Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Taelolu Otitoju, gave the warning in Ado-Ekiti during the official opening of five blocks of four lock-up shops at the Oja Bisi market in Ado-Ekiti.

    He said the illegal extensions to the shops without approval and erection of kiosks under power lines were unwholesome and constitute grave danger to the people.

    Princess Adebisi Aderonke pledged on behalf of the other market women to comply with the rules and regulations in the agreement signed with the state government.

  • FHA’s Social Housing Scheme to transform sector’s deficit

    FHA’s Social Housing Scheme to transform sector’s deficit

    • 800 Co-operative Societies embrace scheme

    As the housing shortage in the country persists, and home ownership becoming more difficult especially with the high cost of construction, more Nigerians are now keying into home ownership through the mortgage system. And to make the process easier, especially for people in the informal sector or those not captured under the National Housing Fund (NHF), Nigerians are now taking advantage of the window of opportunity now made possible by the Federal Housing Authority (FHA), through its Social and Co-operative housing programme. This scheme allows the informal sector, especially artisans and traders, to form themselves into cooperative societies, through which they can apply for mortgage financing or support from the authority. Through this scheme, financially weak members of cooperative societies could latch on to the strength of the group to make real their home ownership dreams.

    As at the end of last week, about 800 Co-operative societies nationwide, with no fewer than 50,000 members, have indicated interest in the Social and Co-operative housing programme of the FHA, says the Managing Director/Chief Executive of the Authority, Professor Mohammed Al-Amin. Many of the cooperative societies, he disclosed, approached the FHA on their own prompting having heard of the social and cooperative housing scheme of the authority, adding that the authority is deliberately cultivating cooperatives in various parts of the country so as to strengthen them to tap into the programme.

    Al-Amin said the authority was focusing on housing delivery for the most vulnerable groups in the society comprising the no-income, low-income and middle low-income earners. To that end, he said the authority had developed special packages for collaboration with non-governmental, faith-based and community-based organisations.The FHA is also working with research institutes for the development of local materials for the construction of houses to make building construction cheaper.

    The FHA boss also hinted that the authority was initiating a savers scheme which would enable workers in the formal and non-formal sectors of the economy own their houses. Also, he said the FHA was working with state governments towards the implementation of a rent-to-own housing scheme which would convert rents paid by tenants for the eventual ownership of such houses. Al-Amin said the preference of many Nigerians for bogus housing designs was one of the major impediments to home ownership, adding that the authority would embark on a campaign to get people to moderate such tastes. He identified lack of housing finance for off-takers, poor conceptualisation and haphazard land acquisition processes as the major causes of the collapse of the National Housing Programmes of the former President Sheu Shagari and the late General Sani Abacha administrations. The FHA, Al-Amin explained, is conscious of these problems, and mobilising all stakeholders to ensure the success of its housing programmes.

    Al-Amin, who was part of the Management Team of the Federal Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development (FMLHUD) that briefed President Muhammadu Buhari on the state of affairs in the housing sector, said the President was passionate about the delivery of affordable mass housing for Nigerians and the rehabilitation of houses destroyed in the on-going insurgency in the North East.

    The President’s interest, he explained, made him request for a viable road map for the implementation of Social Housing for the masses, adding that Buhari was emphatic that an efficient and effective social housing would, among others, make Nigerians benefit from governance.

  • Impacts of FMBN on housing delivery in Adamawa State

    I had the privilege of being the guest speaker during the ground-breaking ceremony for the Bindow Housing Estate, Yola on 19th August, 2015. The ceremony flagged off the programme of His Excellency, Senator Muhammad Bindow Jibrilla, Governor of Adamawa State, for improving housing delivery in the State. I would like to congratulate him and the people of Adamawa State for the good works he has so earnestly begun.

    It is a good time for housing in Nigeria. The Federal Government of President Muhammadu Buhari has targeted the delivery of one million housing units per annum, as part of his bold measures to close the supply gap for housing in the country. Based on the empirical evidence that the construction of a three-bedroom unit creates up to 17 jobs, the President’s housing initiative will create 17 million jobs.

    Part of the recent major developments in the housing sector was the approval of the National Policy on Housing. The policy makes provision for social housing for low- and no-income earners; emphasizes private sector-led housing delivery; more robust financing; improvement in institutional capacity to deliver housing; and inclusion of local content and adoption of local building materials.

    As the foremost institution facilitating affordable housing in the country, the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria is proud that the people of Adamawa State have always embraced the National Housing Fund (NHF) scheme of FMBN. This ensures that we are ever ready to support housing initiatives in the State. As at April 2015, the State contributed a total of N2.97 billion to the NHF scheme, being 2.5% deductions from workers’ monthly income.

    The FMBN has in turn invested a total of N2.8 billion in supporting the provision of affordable housing in Adamawa State. This was by way of disbursing N1.62 billion under FMBN’s Estate Development Loans (EDLs) to the State-owned Adasolid Properties Ltd, and to two private developers, for the construction of about 500 housing units which have been successfully completed and sold to NHF contributors in the State. Another EDL of over N800 million for additional 240 units is being finalized.

    With the housing units already delivered, we estimate that FMBN has contributed to the creation of no less than 8,500 jobs in Adamawa State.

    Aside from Estate Development Loans, Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria has also provided affordable mortgage loans of about N1.18 billion to 833 beneficiaries through Adamawa Savings and Loans Ltd. I wish to assure that FMBN will be providing mortgage loans at an affordable interest rate of 6%, repayable over 30 years, for the off-takers of the Bindow Housing Estate, Yola as part of our contribution to the success of the new housing project.

    In line with addressing the shelter needs of our most unfortunate fellow citizens that were affected by the insurgency and violence in the North East region, I wish to assure that the FMBN will also be actively involved in the implementation of the Federal Government’s resettlement programme for Internally Displaced Person (IDPs), being anchored by the Federal Ministry of Lands, Housing & Urban Development. I am reliably informed that as part of its contribution, the Adamawa State Government has expeditiously provided unencumbered land for this worthy intervention.

    In general, Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria is focused on service improvement and operational efficiency. The National Housing Fund scheme has become the cornerstone of the strategic deployment of our corporate resources. For instance, we deployed the NHF e-Collection Platform for transparency and accountability in the NHF process, while providing the contributors, including those in Adamawa State, access to up-to-date records of contributions online.

    Our products portfolio is being boosted to include services to the non-salaried/informal sector which accounts for about 85% of the national working population. We are also focusing on cooperative societies and trade unions. Our latest products are the Nigeria Diaspora Mortgage Scheme which will provide opportunities for Nigerians living abroad to acquire houses in the country after minimum of two years of contribution to the NHF. We have also innovated by developing the Home Renovation Loan which will enable contributors have access to quick loans to improve their housing conditions, at very affordable rates. These products, which will be launched by His Excellency, President Muhammadu Buhari very shortly, will also make impacts in housing delivery in Adamawa State as with every state of the country; but in particular those states that have signed up to the National Housing Fund.

    I would like to make some recommendations. No nation can develop structurally and economically without housing being on the front burner. As the efforts at eradicating the threats of insurgency and violence have intensified, Governments at both the Federal and State levels must, as a matter of urgency, commence the rebuilding of lives and property.

    In this regard, I would like to commend Governor Bindow Jibrilla, who has shown leadership in addressing this national imperative in earnest. The ground-breaking for the Bindow Housing Estate within his first 100 days is indeed very commendable.

    It will be recalled that after the World War II, the conquering U.S. Government embarked on the European Recovery Programme. This programme, popularly known as the Marshall Plan, helped to rebuild European economies that were battered by the war. While the activities of the insurgents in the North East remain deplorable, we are happy that we continue to see various efforts at rebuilding our towns and villages, and more importantly, lives.

    Construction is one of the most effective ways of rebuilding lives and the economy. It does not only help in effectively reclaiming lost territory and pride; it revitalizes trading activities; boosts social interaction; and restores a sense of normalcy in daily life. However, much more than these, housing construction will provide our teeming youths the much-needed employment from which they will gain a sense of belonging in the society; and, therefore, shun anti-social and criminal tendencies.

    As part of the strategies in providing a suitable environment for housing construction-led boom, I would like to make some assertions. Closer collaboration between the Federal and State Governments is very important in making unencumbered land available for housing development. This will also improve intergovernmental agency partnership in housing delivery. Review of the legal and regulatory framework for housing and mortgage finance, especially the reduction of time and cost of transfer and titling of property, is very germane.

    Increased workers’ enlightenment on the benefits of the National Housing Fund (NHF) scheme and interaction with Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria is also very important. As mentioned earlier, FMBN is embarking on a Home Renovation Loan Scheme that will be of immense benefit to workers. However, the prospective beneficiaries are contributors to the NHF Scheme.

    Finally, there is need for improvement in stakeholder collaboration in housing delivery. While FMBN will continue to reach out to every potential and existing contributor, it requires the support of state governments and labour groups for us to fulfill our mandate under the Scheme.

    I wish to reiterate the determination of the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria to sustain its drive for affordable mass housing delivery for low and medium income earners. Although the Bank is facing funding challenges due to reliance on only NHF contributions at present, we will continue to improve our work processes and service delivery to satisfy the yearnings of NHF contributors within the limits of our resources.

    On behalf of Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria, I would like to congratulate Governor Bindow Jibrilla once again, and assure him and the other state governors of our enduring support in housing delivery as a key strategy of moving the nation forward.

    • Gimba Ya’uKumo, OON, is Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria
  • Make housing affordable, NASFAT urges Ambode

    Make housing affordable, NASFAT urges Ambode

    The Women wing of the Nasrul-lahi-l-Fatih Society (NASFAT) has urged the Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to provide affordable housing for Lagosians.

    According to NASFAT, the homes sold by Ambode’s predecessor were out of the reach of the poor.

    Speaking during a visit to The Nation as part of its activities for the 16th Women’s Week, NASFAT National Women Affairs Secretary, Alhaja Samiat Mumuni, said housing should be made affordable for low income earners.

    “How many civil servants can afford buying a home as much as N13 million? Housing scheme should not be for first class or middle class alone, the lower cadre  should be the utmost beneficiaries like what we had during the Lateef Jakande era,” she said.

    Alhaja Mumuni hailed Ambode’s alignment project in the ministries, urging him to encourage staff with better welfare.

    For the ministries to thrive, she said, Ambode should ensure all leakages in the civil service are blocked.

    She lamented the high rate of unemployment, calling President Muhammadu Buhari to urgently address the issue.

    She said: “The federal government should provide enabling environment for existing companies to generate more employment. The idea of companies relocating to neighbouring countries should be discouraged. Mr President should formulate policy that brings in more investors and not the one that will drive investors away.”

  • How to improve housing

    For Nigeria to improve on housing deficits, estate surveyors and valuers must be involved.

    An Abuja surveyor, Diran Adetunji, said experts would be better managers of the sector because they have requisite skills.

    He said: “Most of those who have administered housing knew little or nothing about housing. It is not surprising therefore that housing sector and housing delivery lacks planning.

    “Nobody sat down to estimate or input the cost and volume of influx of people into the cities and urban areas. Consequently, there is no short term and long term plans of housing the people, particularly the poor ones.”

    The surveyor, who noted that the phase one of the Abuja housing plan has not been completed several years after the nation’s capital was relocated to there, added that there were limited number of buildable plots and space with more people struggling to get what they can.

    “That challenge was there because planning didn’t take into consideration the potential growth, the number of people who are coming in as a result of moving the administrative headquarters of the country to Abuja.

    “No matter how you look at it, the housing sector has suffered a great deal due to lack of proper planning and this constitutes a very big impediment to housing delivery.

    “All we need to do at this juncture is to allow the Estate Surveyors and Valuers to take charge and commence from the point of proper diagnosis of the problem, re enact the Land and Housing policies that will guaranty access to housing on a continuous basis in Nigeria,” he said.

    He highlighted issues such as the absence of good title for plots; lack of basic infrastructures that will facilitate smooth development and finance as some of the challenges facing improved housing in the country.

    But with the establishment of the Nigeria Mortgage Refinance Company Plc (NRMC) by the Central Bank of Nigeria in collaboration with the World Bank, Adetunji expressed hope that mortgage facilities would be available for the people.

     

  • Expert advises govt on housing

    The Nigerian-British Chamber of Commerce (NBCC) has called on the government to come up with viable legal framework for real estate sector to provide affordable houses for Nigerians.

    The Managing Director, UACN Property Development Company Plc (UPDC), Mr. Hakeem Ogunniran, spoke at the NBCC Breakfast Meeting in Lagos.

    Speaking on a topic, Real Estate: an agenda for the new government,  Ogunniran identified unavailability of titled land, multiplicity of regulatory authorities with oversight functions, unfriendly approval, lack of infrastructure, poor funding and labour shortage  as some of the challenges confronting  housing development.

    He said most of the problems were as a result of lack of clear legal framework for the industry. He however advised the government to enact quality laws that would pave way for affordable housing.

    Ogunniran explained that affordable housing is possible with a new approach in which the government would be responsible for the provision of land, infrastructure and enabling environment for investors.

    “At that platform, we would have financials, developers and other regulatory agencies who will make it easy and cheaper to deliver those houses at a price point that is affordable by the people in that category.Under the present dispensation it is difficult to deliver houses in that category because you have to buy your land in the open market, apply for permission and approval in the same way, pay all the fees, go through custom  without any concession,”  Ogunniran explained.

    He said Nigeria is ranked 86 out of 102 in the Global Real Estate Transparency Index, adding that this was not good enough. He cited success recorded by Kenya in the sector, urging Nigeria to emulate.

    President, NBCC Prince Dapo Adelegan, said with the population of over 170 million, Nigeria will need about 16 million housing units to shelter its citizens since over 50 per cent of people are either homeless or live in inadequate houses.

    He said it had become obvious that the government could not  meet this crucial need of the people, hence the need for public-private partnership.

    He said: “It is important to have some public-private partnership arrangements to come up with an ingenious ways to build cheaper homes and provide affordable mortgages to the citizens. NBCC will collaborate with UPDC to pursue passage of viable legal framework at the National Assembly to enhance provision of affordable houses for Nigerians.”

  • ‘Why housing corporations are not performing’

    Political interference and lack of independence have been identified as the bane of housing agencies.

    President,  Association of Housing Corporations of Nigeria (AHCN), Dr. Ifenna E. Chukwujekwu, said at the association’s forum in Lagos that these factors, among others are hindering the sorporations from performing.

    With Nigeria’s homeownership rate put at about 25 per cent, compared to 90 per cent in Singapore, 70 per cent in the United States, 74 per cent in Brazil, 63 per cent in Columbia, 56 per cent in South Africa and 41 per cent in Libya, Chukwujekwu regretted that the situation did not give much hope of improving because most of the state housing agencies were underutilised and have been rendered redundant, thereby making them be in a position in which they are unable to effectively discharge their primary responsibility as stated in the laws setting them up.

    He hinged the corporations’ failure on the usurpation of their  roles by the states’ ministry, adding that the latter are supposed to formulate policies and monitor its parastatals to ensure compliance.

    Besides, Chukwujekwu noted inadequate finance to state housing corporations on project execution as a limiting factor ins the industry.

    According to the AHCN chief, inadequate moral support and backing in terms of loan guarantee for state housing corporations when seeking housing loans and politicking with such funds, has rendered some corporations unable to meet up with servicing their loans.

    The non-availability of Primary Mortgage Institutions (PMIs) to assist some state housing corporations in disposing some of their housing units, he insisted, has  been a problem.

    “The problems of housing delivery are rooted in the lack of finance, escalating cost of building materials and infrastructural development cost; these three problems have also constrained the performance of housing agencies,” Chukwujekwu said.

    He listed other problems to include lack of government’s support in the provision of infrastructural facilities in most housing estates, inadequate funding of research on local building materials; withdrawal of some state governments from the National Housing Fund (NHF) contribution, the establishment of politically motivated parallel housing organisations in some state, thereby duplicating the duties of the corporations.

    But all hope is not lost. Chukwujekwe said the corporations could still deliver on their mandate if they are shielded from political interference.

    To do this, he said the corporations shoud be commercialised to make them more productive.

    Also, the corporations should be restructured to make them vibrant.

    AHCN was established in 1964 to make available homes and mass produce houses in their states.

  • ‘Fed Govt needs N69tr for housing’

    For the Federal Government to tackle the housing deficit in the country, about 820,000 housing units worth about N69 trillion will be required yearly, the Managing Director of Home Lottery Limited, Mr. Kelvin Otung, has said.

    He spoke at his firm’s presentation to a winner of a three-bedroom house in its home lottery scheme.

    He explained that the motivation for the lottery was borne out of the fact that Nigeria has a huge  housing need.

    Otung explained that though the firm was not assuring on having the capacity to resolve the housing deficit through the home lottery, his company plans to contribute about 1, 000 housing units yearly, and build a very good bridge between the government and the people by bringing housing closer to the people, especially people who cannot  own a house with ease.

    Furthermore, he explained that the idea behind the lottery is to offer Nigerians the opportunity to own a home through a credible, sustainable and logically transparent lottery scheme

    His conviction of achieving this feat may have been buoyed by the participation level in the first draw in the first week of the firm’s outing.

    According to Otung, in the first draw which produced the first winner, 2,000 people played in the lottery- an impressive figure considering that it just started operating. Subsequently, draws for homes are to hold weekly, and ultimately, multiple draws daily, until the 1, 000 housing units are achieved.

    The winner of the home,from Delta State, Mr. Elue Gabriel Mokogwu, said it was his first time to play a lottery because he had always considered lottery as a fraud.

    “On May 30, 2015, I bought two lottery tickets at N250 each of Home lottery Limited. When I got a call that I had won, I couldn’t believe it because I had never played any kind of lotto before now; I am so happy,” he explained.

    The house may likely serve as a good source of income for the Asaba-based businessman since he has no plan of relocating to Lagos. However, he said he was yet to decide what to do with the house.