Tag: Housing

  • Housing could be social, but it’s a business venture

    Housing could be social, but it’s a business venture

    Over the years, the provision of housing for the citizens has been promised by successive administrations, both at federal and state levels, in the country but this promise is scarcely kept. The Managing Director, Propertygate, Tokunbo Ajayi says government’s venturing into the provision of housing is like running an enterprise which governments are not designed undertake. He said the embrace of public-private partnership (PPP) initiative to address the deficit in housing provision has succeeded. He spoke on other challenges besetting the property and environment sector with SEYI ODEWALE.

     

    Talking about Public and Private Partnership (PPP) in housing delivery, how has this helped in ameliorating the problems associated with housing provision?

    I would say, to an extent, taking into consideration places like Lagos, Abuja and other cities in the country, that it has recorded about 70 per cent success. Against this background is the question, if we don’t have PPP, where are we likely to be by now? If you remember, the state was in the business of providing housing and in terms of quantum, the state could not do much just as we did not see anything spectacular in terms of quality. But when the government tried to bring in public, private participation into housing, you could see that it has greatly revolutionised housing delivery. In Lagos for instance, all these HFP developments, Victoria Garden City (VGC) and many others along the Lekki corridor and even on the mainland, are as a result of PPP. What we have now could be likened to an explosion from the private developers. And how did we have that? It is because the Lagos State government allowed it. I know also about Abuja, where a huge hectare of land was given to developers under the private estate developers’ scheme. By this, their participation has not only uplifted housing delivery to an extent. So, I will say that it’s been a very positive development.

    Going by this, one may ask what business has government in housing delivery.

    Well, I think before now, the thinking was that the government should be the provider of virtually everything for the public but that thinking has changed substantially, not only in the global perspective, but also in developing nations like Nigeria.

    That explains a lot of changes you have seen in the privatisation programme of the Federal Government. Government is more of an enabler of good environment for private sector to thrive and the government is to concentrate enormous energy on the provision of public infrastructure and other things that could be difficult for the private sector to provide. Housing could be social, but it is also a business venture. The private sector is better enabled to do that. And I think that is what governments of various states and at the federal level have seen that is making many of them divest from housing provision. Even when they have parastatals doing that, they do it like a private concern. So, it is no longer a social thing. Government can find a way of making housing accessible to others through policies and other measures. Going into businesses such as provision of housing by governments is like running an enterprise. And governments all over the world are not designed to do that, even in communist China; it’s the private sector that is driving China now.

    What is your assessment of built environment and the construction industry?

    When you talk about the built environment, you are talking about the totality of real estate, construction, infrastructure and others. I will say we have made some strides, but we still have a long way to go, notwithstanding the gains made. If you look at our environment, you will see that it is still plagued with a lot of environmental issues. In the area of provision of infrastructure, many governments are trying, but there is so much to do as we are extremely far behind. If you take for instance, Lekki corridor, the corridor is said to be a major developmental asset not only to Lagos, but other parts of the country. But for about 15 years, there has not been any alternative road to the Lekki-Epe road, the only major road to the corridor. You see congestion and traffic gridlock all the time. Even if the road is extended, it can only do a little because what will naturally happen is that a lot of people will move to the area. If you look at areas designed long time ago, that have network of roads, you hardly experience traffic gridlock. But along Lekki corridor, traffic gridlock is giving the area a different look. For instance, if you are caught in the traffic when you are almost getting to where you are going, you cannot do anything about it.

    Perhaps, the topography of the area did not make the constructing alternative routes attractive.

    No, I don’t think so. Roads can be constructed on water and the area is not even on water. It is because the roads were not built and you don’t expect the private sector that is providing primary infrastructure, which adds to the cost of providing housing by them, to go and provide this basic infrastructure. If they do this, it will add to the cost of delivering the houses and there is a limit to which they can go. There is also the problem of non-enforcement of physical planning. If you go to any civilised society, you would not see people building shops anyhow. It is not just possible. These things desecrate the environment; they kill property values. You see people building houses thinking that the houses will be their source of income, but people just come and build shops and all what not, in locations that are hitherto, sought by people. Nobody would want to go to such areas because of the blight created by the indiscriminate shops and shanties built here and there. Another thing is that such environments would harbour miscreants and create serious security issue.

    This again will make most people to reconsider their living in such environments. Consequently, the value of property in those locations would drop and the owners of such properties would be impoverished. So, in a regulated society, you cannot put even a table on the road or anywhere without permission but here you can do it and get away with it. All these things have serious implications. One of the problems Lagos State has is population. A lot of people come into Lagos. But why? I know the government is concerned, but I don’t think the government has seen the linkage between this environment and population influx. People don’t come to Lagos because they want to see bridges; they come to Lagos because they believe it is where they can make a living for themselves. If you can move into a city and start work almost immediately, then you will see that a lot of people will be interested in coming there.

    If anybody comes into Lagos today and starts selling recharge cards, what value does that add to the state? When you are looking at those coming into the city, you ask about the quality of those coming in and what they are bringing into the society. Those people will create more problems for the city because the income they are going to make from such activities can hardly make them get by. As a result, they are hungry, homeless, and they become threats to the society. But when you don’t have such opportunities, you will ask yourself what are you doing in the city when you can stay back in your village and help it grow? So, it is a win, win situation for everybody. But when you come into the city and have it desecrated and added no value to it, what happens? Erroneously, we think adding value is about numbers. If that is true, the most populous city should be the richest in the world. But it doesn’t work that way. Unfortunately, we are carried away by sentiments saying that if we move those people from the streets, what are they going to do?

    But in a way, the government has a responsibility to put people on the right path. A guy selling recharge cards on the road, putting a table on the road to display his wares may probably not have more than N5000 worth of things to sell. Ask yourself where would that lead such a fellow in life? That kind of business is not sustainable.

    Before now, people engage themselves in various kinds of skills that helped them to make a decent living for themselves. In construction and real estate sector, I know that a lot of services of artisans are needed. And they are well paid compared to somebody who stays on the street. People can learn that and become somebody and be useful to themselves and the society. But a man who sells on the road side can hardly become anything in the future. But again, because we always want populist policies, which in the real sense are not sustainable, we always have issues with them.

    Again, if you chase somebody selling planks and reinforcement iron on the road, people will make noise saying you are pushing away poor people from earning a living. But a man selling those things is not poor. The value of those rods runs into millions. They take advantage of the state to put their stock on the road. When you have things like this, you cannot have a useful environment. The built environment is also connected with the way it is financed. When we get to financing, you will get the picture. If a place is not well financed, then you have a very big problem in the society. These are some of the problems affecting our built environment. In a nutshell, government must invest in a massive infrastructure.

    Sometimes I see it as unfair, while it is good to develop certain areas, but at whose expense? For instance, if I look at the massive improvement in infrastructure in places such as Ikoyi and Victoria Island (VI), I say they are nice, but many of those who work there and do not stay there also pay taxes. Where they live, have you provided infrastructures for them?

    There should be a balance where you provide infrastructure across board for people to feel governance. You cannot go to London for instance and put your shop anywhere. It’s not possible. So, why do we do that here? You cannot develop a property without an approval. Once we have infrastructures in place then we can begin to have a more presentable and tidier environment.

    Is there any hope for a medium or low income earner to own a house in the city?

    The Lagos State government then was interested in developing the neighbourhood and I can tell you that around 1995, the state government was giving a hectare of land for about N100,000 to private developers because they believe that they would be able to do mass housing for people. But as at two years ago, a hectare was going for N65 million, this is in less than 20 years. I can tell you that those given the land as private estate developers to do housing schemes then, did not help matters. They allowed it to stay for long for it to increase in value. However, it is what you buy that you produce. That is one of the problems. Again, you see land in the hands of speculators, which also is a dangerous dimension.

    However, whichever way it was done, you see land ending up in the hands of people who are not developers. So, when they had those lands, many of them held them back, thinking that they will make enormous money from it, so they are holding it. Consequently, economic activities are tied down, so everybody is losing. And for developers too, when eventually you are compelled to buy, start point of land alone is very expensive. And by the time you factor in the costs of infrastructure and because of the kind of development you have along the corridor, those ones have set the benchmark and you don’t want to do something below that because people will compare you to others. Now when you have that cost of producing infrastructure, then you have the cost of providing certain primary infrastructures, which ordinarily should be the responsibility of the state. A combination of all these would give you an expensive product.

    Then you talk about cost of funding. By the time you put all together, you would realise that cost of houses are high. If you want to buy a plot of land in Lekki Phase I, it’s about N120,000 per square metre and for a thousand square metres; that is N120 million. What can that do for you? And maybe you get a loan of N500 million, the cost of land alone per unit is about N40 million to N50 million, you have not built the house and have not provided infrastructure. So by the time you do that you have a very expensive product. That explains why houses are expensive.

    The shocking thing, we can be very funny here, we pride ourselves in things that should not be considered as things of pride. People accord much recognition to Lekki corridor as being expensive. Money is money, when you take the value of this product and compare them to others abroad, you will see the difference. If you buy land for about N150 million, that is about $1 million. If you have $1 million you will have property anywhere in the globe in choice areas, but if you compare that neighbourhood with the one you are spending exactly the same amount on, you will see the difference as clear as the difference between light and day.

    Some of the places you have here do not have street lights, the roads are not good, you see shanties around and you are still going to spend a $1million on them. For people who have lived abroad, they find it extremely difficult to part with that kind of money. And when they do, it’s because they don’t have a choice. But that is not the way it should be. This tells us that the prices are off the mark. A property is as good as its environment.

    What is the way out?

    The way out is a loaded question and I will attempt it from every angle. From the environmental angle, I think various governments are expected to perform their constitutional roles with the provision of primary infrastructures. Let me quickly say that when things are not going right, we usually put the blame on either the Federal Government or the state governments. But the reality is that about 60 per cent of our roads are actually under the management or control of local governments.

    But there is no enough funding for local governments to do that?

    That is one of the things we need to address, because if we don’t address them they are not empowered to provide roads. But they are constitutionally required to do that because those roads are under their jurisdiction. But the question is: how many of them do that? So, how do we ensure that this is done? This has to do with the demand of the public. As long as we keep quiet, nothing will happen. But the moment we begin to agitate for what should be done, we will move closer to a perfect situation. And when we start to perform our obligations as responsible citizens by paying taxes, government will be able to do its job. It is also a matter of demand and supply. Why are people coming to a particular location and prices of houses are rising? We talk about Lekki, prices of houses are not high in Lekki because it is Lekki, it is the demand on Lekki. The people coming to Lekki, where are they coming from? Why are they relocating to Lekki?

    The simplest answer is that in life people want progress. The man is relocating from either, Mushin, Agege or Ajegunle where because of poor performance at the governmental level, those environments have been allowed to decay. Again, because of change of status he wants to move out of those areas. He then asks himself, where do I go? He cannot afford Ikoyi or Ikeja GRA, but he can try Magodo, Omole GRA or Lekki corridor. So as long as people are coming there, the prices of houses will continue to rise

    But if there is urban renewal programmes and environments like these are made worthwhile for people to begin to live in them and if roads and drainage systems are provided and everywhere is cleared of shanties, people will be encouraged to live there and not relocate.

    For instance, when Oshodi was cleared nobody ever thought that the place could that beautiful. So if places like Bariga, and other areas that have shanties are fixed, people will ask questions like why do I need to go to Lekki? This will reduce considerably, the volume of people moving to other areas as prices of houses in where they are moving to will come down. For instance, people in Lekki/Ajah area are moving to Lekki Phase I because they are reacting to traffic gridlock around VGC and Ajah round about. VGC in terms of ambience is much better than Lekki Phase I, but Lekki Phase I commands premium value than VGC because people are locating there. The cause of this, you will agree with me, is infrastructure-road network.

    Abroad, most environments are the same, some places maybe top notch, but most places are the same. That is one of the things to be done to solve the problem. Talking about policies to aid real estate development, you then ask yourself when you are giving land to people, who are you giving land to? Are you giving land to speculators or people in the business of real estate? This is because some people have been given land in Lekki in the past 20 years or more and if you ask them for the land they will ask you to bring billions. And if you say you don’t have that much they will tell you to live the land there. I think it’s proper for government to ask those given the land for over 20 years what they have done with the land.

    Can’t individual developer approach government for land?

    It’s possible, because the one my firm, Propertygate, built on, which is Alexandra Quarters, is a direct allocation from the government. And I’m aware that some of the developments along the corridor are like that. But there are also quite a number of lands allocated to non real estate developers. I’m aware of lands allocated indiscriminately to people and the moment they got the land, they came to developers to say that they had lands for sale.

  • Expert proffers solution to housing problems

    Expert proffers solution to housing problems

    Residents of the Federal Capital Territory are going through excruciating accommodation experience. Over 70 per cent of those living in Abuja have one accommodation challenge or the other.

    The FCT Administration, on the other hand, had embarked on massive demolition of estates, which has further compounded an already complex problem.

    Is there a way out of the logjam?

    The Chairman/CEO of Festrut Group, Engr. Festus U. Asikhia, whose subsidiary Festrut Global Shelter owns estates in the FCT expressed optimism that the FCT can rise up to the challenge.

    He said that if the right thing is done, the housing problem in the Capital City can be surmounted.

    He said: “The FCT Administration should have sincerity of purpose. And one of the ways to do that is to carry out feasibility studies in order to know those that have carved a niche for themselves and are doing credibly well.

    “Call them for a Town Hall meeting and ask them of their financial capacity and technical knowhow on how to provide affordable houses. Then, the FCT should carry out a Joint Venture scheme with the developers.

    “Let the FCT Administration provide the land and let the developers tell the FCT how much they can use in building a particular house. The FCT should then put a benchmark on the how much the houses should be sold since it has provided the land.

    “So, out of the sale of the houses, we are taking this amount for the land that we have provided. Then, the government would have succeeded in providing a benchmark on how much a unit of house should be sold.

    On how Festrut Global Shelter can help to provide affordable houses in the FCT, Asikhia said the company is starting a 36-month repayment plan for houses purchased by people.

    “What we do at Festrut Global Shelter is to complement housing solution in the FCT, and by extension Nigeria and beyond through promotion and development of modern estates with first-class infrastructures and facilities in communities which will guarantee adequate comfort, peace and safety for residents.

    “We are doing this in the most cost-effective and flexible manner. We are starting a scheme in Abuja and Lagos. A prospective buyer could make a 20 per cent down payment for the house and the balance is spread over 24 or 36 months. After paying 50 per cent, you move in and pay the balance as laid out. That is the scheme Festrut is putting together in this our fourth year.”

    He expressed the view that government should not regulate rent. This, he said, is because one cannot regulate what it has not contributed to.

    “Government can’t regulate house rents when they have not contributed their own quota in mass housing development. It cannot do this when they have not contributed provided shelter for the masses. You have power over what you have provided. What you have not provided, you don’t have power over it. There should be sincerity of purpose on the side of government.

    “The government should engage intelligent and vibrant professionals. They should engage people who know their onions in the sector and give them the opportunity to serve; to carry out contractual works for them. With that, government can regulate rent.

    “On the other hand, can I go and buy land at N400 million and build a house of N200 or N300 million and you will say I should follow your price tag? A whole lot of things will go wrong because some people that are used in charging exorbitant prices on houses will be affected. So, how are we going to solve it?”

    On what should be done on the issue of poor quality houses built by developers, Asikhia said the opinion that the only way government can get developers to build quality houses is through joint ventures.

    “The only way government can do a project and get standard is to hold somebody responsible. A goat put in custody of the community will die of hunger. No one will feed it. Let somebody be responsible,” he said.e rent

     

  • ‘Why housing for all remains elusive’

    Nigeria’s desire to provide houses for her citizenry remains a dream,14 years after the first attempt to address the issue, reports Seyi Odewale.

     

     

    As the nation celebrated the 14th anniversary of democratic rule last Wednesday, Pa Olasunkanmi Adepoju, a pensioner and his colleagues were not happy. Reason: What they envisaged when democracy began in 1999 was not what they got years after. They had thought the political dispensation would, at least, give them and many others the opportunity to be house owners. To them, the military that handed power to the politicians was more benevolent than the civilians on land matters.

    Barely five years into democratic rule, the land, which they bought from the previous military government and which they had started developing,was suddenly taken over from them. What has been their lot is an endless hope that they will repossess the land. They said successive civilian governments since 1999 have failed woefully in housing matters.

    Adepoju argued that one of major policy thrusts of the Nigerian National Housing Policy during the Chief Olusegun Obasanjo regime was accessing funds for housing development through co-operatives. He said it was a policy aimed at tackling the housing problem of the country. But, unfortunately, he said, Obasanjo’s government did not deliver.

    “Look at our experience at Aboru Housing scheme, which we got under site and services scheme; look at the way we were dispossessed of our land, rightly bought from the government. We are yet to resolve that issue,” he said.

    As laudable as the policy was, it, however, died with the exit of Obasanjo’s regime. Policy of this nature, directed at solving a fundamental problem like residential accommodation, experts said, should not die with the government that initiated it because the crisis of inadequate housing facilities did not die with the expiration of the initiating regime.

    The late President Umaru Yar ‘Adua’s administration, recognising that Nigeria has a huge housing deficit, evidenced by low levels of the real estate sector and mortgage credits to the sector, accounting for less than one per cent and 0.5 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), planned an evolution of the National Policy on Urban Development and Housing that provided for a private sector-led housing policy with the government providing the enabling operating environment. This formed the fifth item on his seven-point agenda.

    But the lack of long-term funds, which has been the bane of housing in Nigeria, and the banking sector’s perceived aversion to financing home ownership, did not make the policy to fly. Added to this is the legal and regulatory environment characterised by archaic laws, which inhibited efficient land transaction. The Land Use Act which needed to be addressed and the untimely death of President Yar ‘Adua, who initiated the policy, dealt the final blow to this laudable policy.

    President Goodluck Jonathan on mounting the saddle professed a revolution of the sector by translating the National Housing Policy and National Urban Development Policy into a roadmap for housing development.

    Speaking at the Presidential Stakeholders Retreat on Housing and Urban Development at the State House last year, Jonathan said reinvigorating as well as revitalising housing and urban development was a core priority of his administration.

    The policies, he said, were to be translated into action through a roadmap for the housing and urban development sector. The roadmap, he explained, would address the challenges of achieving a housing revolution in in the country, within the shortest possible time. “It would also provide the pathway for transforming our cities into livable and functional human settlements,” he said, emphasising the importance of cooperation of all stakeholders to achieve this objective.

    Jonathan had estimated the housing deficit to be between 16 and 17 million units, a fact corroborated by his Housing and Urban Development Minister, Ms. Amah Pepple.

    “If this deficit is to be bridged, we must continue to seek ways to provide affordable housing, especially to the no-income, low-income, lower-medium income, and the informal, sector worker. A variety of housing delivery schemes, including social housing, rental schemes, regeneration and Housing cooperatives must be evaluated.

    “We must also seriously concern ourselves with how we can meet the global benchmarks in housing building standards, proper land use and space standards and institutionalisation of a vibrant mortgage system, based on long-term repayment terms.

    “In the same manner, we must focus attention on how to overcome the issues of capacity gaps, poor quality of building materials, inappropriate technology and dearth of technological innovations, in support of mass housing delivery,” he said.

    Experts have said the huge deficit is yet to be bridged. They said the 17 million shortfall, which Nigeria is experiencing, is a farcry from the United Nations’ minimum standard for housing. This has necessitated an endless clamour by experts in the sector for a more critical look at bridging the gap

    The Nigerian Institute of Building (NIOB), President, Chucks Omeife, said no government worth its salt would overlook the sensitive issue of housing as it concerns its citizen. He said the Jonathan administration should not treat the issue of mass housing with levity.

    Housing, he said, has come to be regarded as a major national issue which should be taken as such. He noted that the huge deficit was worrisome.

    A former President of the Nigerian Institution of Surveyors (NIS), Olushola Atilola, said the nonchalant approach of previous governments to the issue of housing in the country was regrettable. He noted that government should allow more private developers participation in driving the housing sector if it wants to achieve housing for a larger percentage of the populace before 2020.

    Finance Minister and the Coordinating Minister of the Economy Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said the country needed to add 23 million homes by 2020 to bridge the supply gap and another 2.6 million homes yearly.

    Atilola, however, noted that acute housing is not a tea party. He said unless the government mustered the political will to address the matter, it would continue to be a recurring problem. He noted that with the President’s comment on the sector it would be unwise to relegate the matter to the background.

    The Real Estate Developers Association of Nigeria (REDAN) has, therefore, asked to be involved in a committee set up by Ms Pepple to solve the deficit issue. A situation whereby about 85 per cent of the populace is homeless, experts said, is lamentable.

    Dr. Okonjo-Iweala said delivering on housing would require a more forceful action across four key areas, which include simplifying allocation of land title and its registration processes; identifying three to four bankable housing projects to deliver at least 1million houses; recognising those who would not be able to buy a house if a mortgage facility is provided and considering what immediate regulatory requirements are to underpin and facilitate urban development in Nigeria. “The poor have a right to housing as well and the Minister of land and I are determined to come up with a low income housing solution for our country,” she had said.

    Experts have, however, insisted that the government has a serious business in real estate and housing. A former President of the Nigerian Institution of Estate Surveyors and Valuers, Chief Charles Olumide Adebiyi, said land in Nigeria and most other places, is under the jurisdiction and control of the government.

    “So to that extent, we can say that property, real estate, whether it is housing, commercial or industrial, because it requires land to be allocated and government is in full control of allocation and pricing of land, government by that has business in property and real estate,” he said.

    But the extent of such involvement, he said, has to be defined. What hampers Federal Government in delivering on its promise on housing, according to him, is the Land Use Act, which gives the states autonomy on lands domiciled in their territories.

    “It may be like a federal thing, but it is not important for the Federal Government to get fully involved in the area of housing since power over land now rests with the states,” he said.

    On the mistrust that the populace has for the government, Chief Adebiyi said: “I agree with you that there are many things government could have done, but because of lack of trust it has not been able to do them Not only in primary issues of land allocation and acquisition, but also on issues relating to developing property, bringing people together to undertake investment in property. It is possible in other places like real estate investment trust; securitisation and so on. It is possible to do many things and make supply available. It is very difficult in Nigeria because of lack of trust. There is lack of trust between the people and government; there is lack of trust among the people themselves in terms of what people say they will deliver; the ability, the willingness and truthfulness in delivery. That is a major problem and it is also one of the things we need to examine very closely.”

  • ‘Why people can’t get housing funds’

    ‘Why people can’t get housing funds’

    Managing Director, Resort Savings and Loans Plc, Mr Abimbola Olayinka, has blamed inability of people to access housing funds on lack of adequate knowledge and misconceived notions about the mortgage banking industry.

    According to him, many people that have not been able to benefit from the National Housing Fund Scheme are unable because they don’t know what obtains in the mortgage banking sector.

    He said several people don’t know how they can get loan to build or buy their dream home and pay back this loan with ease.

    “Many people are simply ignorant and many still believe it is difficult to have access to funds in the financial sector. I believe for instance that if somebody keeps a regular employment he has no reason not to own a house of his own. The modalities are simple and the funds are accessible,” Olayinka said.

    He, however, urged the government to extend the housing for all scheme to rural dwellers, noting that the arrangements now mostly favour those dwelling in the cities.

    He said the government can support the mortgage subsector to finance houses built by developers for rural dwellers so that they can have a feel of government presence, adding that the mortgage subsector should be motivated to also come up with products that can be tailored towards the rural housing scheme.

    He decried a situation where dwellers in rural areas do not have decent accommodation, noting that ignorance about mortgages in rural areas has created a situation where many of those who live in these places suffer from lack of decent accommodation.

    ‘’If there are good houses in the hinterland, people will not mind living in those places and coming to work in the urban centres through the use of buses and train. Unfortunately, most of the houses in the rural areas are not well built. Individuals just go to develop those places without following a laid down plan. The result of such is that the places turn out to be inhabitable in the future,’’ Olayinka said.

    While commending Federal Government’s efforts at providing housing for the average Nigerian, he urged government to encourage the construction of social houses that are highly subsidised in rural areas which can be financed by mortgage banks in order to make life better for rural dwellers.

     

  • Kebbi to build 400 housing units

    Kebbi State Government has approved the release of N2.5 billion for the construction of 400 housing units in the Birnin Kebbi, state capital and Dakingari town.

    The state Commissioner for Lands and Housing, Alhaji Hussaini Raha, spoke after the state Executive Council (EXCO) meeting.

    He said the houses will be made of 150 three-bedroom flats and 150 two bedroom flats to be constructed on the Birnin Kebbi-Kalgo road.

    According to the Commissioner, the 100 units for Dakingari town is made up of 50 three-bedroom flats and two bedroom flats to support the take-off of the newly established Kebbi State Polytechnic adding that the houses would serve as its staff quarters.

    Raha also said the Executive council has approved the payment of compensation for landlords who were affected by the township road dualisation in Dakingari town.

     

  • Imoke delivers on housing promises

    Imoke delivers on housing promises

    CROSS River State Governor Liyel Imoke has made good his promise to provide houses for the people of the state, helping to solve a major challenge in the country.

    Across major cities in Nigeria, the housing needs of the people, especially the low income earners, are alarming. The situation is so frightening that many Nigerians have become destitute, sleeping under the bridges and street corners, irrespective of the vagaries of the weather.

    Experts have attributed the high demand for houses and the slow response to the housing needs to the lack of will on the part of political gladiators, the weak private sector or lack of drive by the private sector to partner with government, and the low income and wages that the government and the private sector pay to the work force.

    The low wage limitation in most states of the federation has been further compounded by the skyrocketing prices of building materials that have defied the law of gravity.

    In the face of these variables, most civil and public servants in Nigeria, who cannot afford to build even one bedroom house are looking forward to the government at different levels to come to their rescue.

    Senator Liyel Imoke of Cross River State is one of the few governors who promptly responded to the yearnings of the civil servants in his state by delivering 200 homes to the civil and public servants at the Atimbo Housing Estates, Akpabuyo local Government Area, which is just 10 minutes drive from the city centre.

    The units, numbering 200 were recently commissioned by Minister of Housing and Urban Development, Mrs Amah Pepple in a memorable ceremony.

    Imoke is not daunted by the de- listing of Cross River State from the league of oil producing states in the Southsouth of Nigeria, and its attendant dwindling revenue.

    Like the Federal Government’s housing policy which is hinged on the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Imoke is bent on delivering at least 7,500 houses to the state civil and public servants before he exits office in 2015. Already the state government, through the Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, has acquired vast lands in seven locations, namely: Calabar, Akpabuyo, Odukpani, Ugep, Ikom, Ogoja and Obudu. However, the Agency that is saddled with the onerous task of delivering these homes to the public servants in the aforementioned locations is the Department of Mortgage Finance and Estate Development.

    The vision of the Agency is ‘to ensure Cross River State becomes and remains the leading State in Nigeria in the provision of affordable housing for its citizens, in an economically and socially sustainable way’.

    The Department was established with the primary objective of facilitating the provision of affordable, decent and functional housing in compliance with defined minimum standards, using a sustainable Public-Private Partnership (PPP) framework.

    This PPP framework for housing development was to be actualised through alliances with the Property developers, Primary Mortgage Institutions (PMIS) Banks and allied financial institutions.

    In Akpabuyo Housing Estate for instance, the Property Developer that is partnering with the Cross River State Government is Aso Savings and Loans plc ASO is providing the mortgage for civil and public servants, while the Cross River State Government, beyond providing guarantees for the Mortgage loans, (on behalf of the civil and public servants), provides infrastructures like roads and public utilities such as water and electricity in the Estate.

    Three weeks ago, the department which is headed by a Special Adviser, in the person of Barr Eddy Edem-Ita ogon, started the handing over of keys to the first set of beneficiaries at the Atimbo Estate, design to house 610 housing units of between one- to three-bedroom bungalows.

    Tuesday, November 6, was the second successive week that the Agency was handing over keys to the lucky civil and public servants who won houses through a very transparent balloting system.

    One of the beneficiaries, Mr. Michael Wonah of the Management Development Institute (MDI), Calabar exclaimed ‘this is a dream come true’ Wonah, like many other civil and public servants who gathered and eagerly awaiting the arrival of Barr. Eddy Ogon at the estate chorused in disbelief whether what they were about to witness was a dream or reality.

    •Utang, a journalist, writes from Cross River

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Budget: Senate slams Education, Housing  for poor implementation

    Budget: Senate slams Education, Housing for poor implementation

    The Senate yesterday expressed worry that the 2012 budget implementation is still below 50 per cent, 41 days to the end of the 2012 fiscal year.

    The Chairman, Senate Committee on Education, Senator Uche Chukwumerije and his counterpart in the Committee on Housing, Land and Urban Development, Senator Bukar Abba Ibrahim, expressed the disappointment of the Senate over the development.

    The lawmakers spoke separately at the 2013 budget defence of the Ministries of Education and Housing, Land and Urban Development in Abuja.

    Chukwumerije noted that while it was commendable that the level of allocation to the education sector for 2013 went up, it was regrettable that the level of implementation of the 2012 budget remained below 50 per cent.

    He said while the scenario holds true for all the sectors, its impact on the education sector is most severe.

    Chukwumerije said it is of importance that the executive arm of the government appreciates the imperative of releasing funds in time.

    He said the oversight visit of his committee to a number of institutions identified the three main deficiencies in the areas of infrastructure, faculty and content.

    The lawmaker noted that while funding may not be adequate to deal with the deficiencies, it is the intention of the committee to evolve and find a solution to the contents and access to content problem.

    According to him, the ultimate goal of an academic institution is to deliver effective content.

    The total budget allocation proposed for the Education sector in the 2013 budget estimate is N427.515 billion, as against N409.531 billion allocated to the sector in the 2012 budget.

    This amounts to an increase of about N17.984 billion for 2013.

    But Senator Chukwumerije regretted a decrease of N6.692 billion in the proposed capital estimate of the Education Ministry, saying the sharp decrease is not healthy for a sector that needs improved funding to address decayed infrastructural facilities, renovation of dilapidated hostels, classrooms and laboratories in tertiary institutions.

    He noted that although the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETF) is assisting in intervening in the funding of special projects in tertiary institutions and Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) in basic education and secondary institutions, there is need to increase the capital cost of institutions.

    The committee, he assured, “hopes to look into this unnecessary shortfall in capital cost to reposition our institutions in world ranking and provide an enviable learning environment for our children.”

    Chukwumerije appealed to the executive arm to complement the intended early passage of the 2013 budget by the release of the amount appropriated by the National Assembly.

    Senator Ibrahim said from the document available to his committee, what has been released to the Ministry of Housing, Land and Urban Development is N18.3 billion.

    The amount, he said, is below 50 per cent of the total allocation to the ministry for 2012.

    Ibrahim lamented that going by the submission from the ministry, the budget performance is only 43 per cent.

    He said he wondered how the budget performance of the ministry would be improved when it remained only 41 days to the end of the fiscal year.

    He alleged: “The Minister of Finance keeps lying that the budget performance is 56 per cent.

    “But Madam Minister (referring to the Minister of Housing, Ms Amal Pepple), you will agree with me that your budget performance is 43 per cent.

    “The Minister of Finance keeps lying to Nigerians about budget performance.

    “The Ministry of Finance is a big magician. It fiddles with figures.

    “Those in the Ministry of Finance think they know everything when they don’t know anything.”

    The committee was not comfortable that the ministry spent N85 million on trips to allegedly supervise a project meant to cost N20 million.

    According to the committee, the ministry should have reduced the number of trips to save money for the project.

    The committee was informed that the ministry has over 40,000 land cases.

    Head, Legal Department of the ministry, Bose Bakare, also said the ministry has nine lawyers to handle the cases.

    She told the committee that the court cases are mostly scattered in Abuja, Lagos, Edo, Anambra, Enugu and Oyo states.

  • Ogun restates commitment to affordable housing

    Ogun restates commitment to affordable housing

    The Ogun State Ministry of Housing’s share of 12 per cent of the N215 billion of the proposed 2013 state budget, would be channelled to the provision of affordable housing for the people of the state.

    This captured the state’s commitment to quality, yet inexpensive housing for its people, a longstanding policy of the Ibikunle Amosun administration.

    Governor Amosun who gave this assurance at a two-day budget breakdown session held at the Oba’s complex, Oke-Mosan, Abeokuta, said the housing scheme would cut across higher, medium and low income earners.

    He said that housing will receive priority attention and that the new housing units will also be equipped with necessary infrastructure to make, while existing estates would get a facelift with improved facilities.

    Speaking with the reporters after the session, the state commissioner for Housing, Mr. Daniel Adejobi expressed optimism that his ministry would open up new housing estates in the coming year, as existing ones were already being completed across the state.

    He said his ministry was already preparing the ground for a landmark achievement by ensuring that the new structures meet international standard.

    Adejobi noted that the mode of payment for ownership of the houses would be by installments, through mortgage financing, after the down payment of 20 per cent.

  • We will revolutionalise Nigeria’s housing sector – Jonathan

    We will revolutionalise Nigeria’s housing sector – Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday said the present administration would revolutionalise the country’s housing sector to make houses accessible to Nigerians irrespective of their socio-economic status.

    Jonathan stated this at a one-day Presidential Stakeholders’ Retreat at the Presidential Banquet hall, Abuja.

    He said already, the Federal Executive Council (FEC) had approved National Housing Policy and National Urban Development Policy in June to facilitate speedy transformation of the housing sector.

    “These policies are to be translated into action through a roadmap for the housing and urban development sector.

    “The roadmap will address the challenges of achieving a housing revolution in our nation within the shortest possible time. It will also provide the path way for transforming our cities into livable and functional human settlements.

    “This retreat will provide us with such opportunity to reaffirm our commitment to the revitalisation of the housing and urban development sector.

    “We believe that through the pooling of resources and talents, we can meaningfully address the impediments to the growth of the sector,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the president as saying at the retreat.

    He noted that inequitable access to land for housing development, inadequacy of housing in view of the national housing deficit estimated at about 16 to 17 million units had remained a critical challenge to all stakeholders in the sector.

    “If the deficit is to be bridged, we must continue to seek ways to provide affordable housing, especially to non-income, low income, lower middle income and the informal sector worker.

    “A variety of housing delivery scheme, including social housing, rental schemes, regeneration and housing corporations must be evaluated,” he added.

    Jonathan, therefore, challenged the participants to devise means of meeting the global benchmarks in housing, building standard, proper land use, and space standard as well as the institutionalization of a vibrant mortgage system, based on long-term repayment terms.

     

  • Lagos builds three housing estates

    The effort of the Lagos State Government to provide decent housing for its teeming population is yielding fruits as three new projects will be handed over to subscribers soon.
    They are a block of luxury flats at Parkview Ikoyi, Maisonette duplex at Ikeja and Gbagada Housing schemes, expressed satisfaction with the rate of completion of the luxury flats at Parkview, Ikoyi.
    He praised the contractors for a job well done and for striving to deliver within the time frame.
    The six units of three-bedroom flats sit on 2,100 square metres in the highbrow area. Its facilities include swimming pool, lawn tennis court, adequate parking space, water treatment plant and others.
    Gbagada has 11 blocks of 88 units of three and four-bedroom maisonettes on a 3.262 hectares of land.
    Ikeja has 76 units of four-bedroom maisonettes in the GRA. The estate has the accompaniment of paved roads with parking lots; mini-water works and independent power supply.
    Jeje expressed satisfaction at the pace of work done and promised that the project will be delivered as at when due.