Tag: lagos

  • Lagos begins ferry terminal pilot operations

    The Lagos State Government has begun  pilot operations at its Ferry Terminal at Ipakodo, Ikorodu in line with its commitment to facilitate an effective and efficient integrated transportation system.

    The Ikorodu terminal has been upgraded to a world-class, robust and accessible hub for the water transportation and other ancillary services.

    This is to engender convenience and safety water transportation experience for both the commuters and operators in the state.

    The terminal, when fully operational, will primarily provide an umbrella shelter for ferry logistics with ample and safe space for operators to load and offload passengers, goods and services. They will provide for the convenience of operators as well as the commuters, safety considerations like water ambulances and emergency rescue and water maintenance in collaboration with Lagos State Waterways Authority (LASWA). The facilities will also provide for recreation and shopping, banking, foodcourt, parking, customer services, security, and well-maintained conveniences.

    The pilot operations is essentially for boat and ferry operators and their passengers to have a feel of the facility ahead of a full go-live in April.

    Ikorodu Terminal Corporate Services Director Amina Agboola said: “Our role is to work with the operators to ensure that this facility is maximised to help develop and grow water transportation in Lagos. We are very keen to provide efficient, safe and world class water transport solutions in Nigeria.

    “Indeed, the safety of operators, commuters, our team and visitors, is a strategic priority for us. We have put in place intelligent control measures which will reduce or eliminate hazards within the terminal. These measures will also take care of delays, eliminate rush, human errors, improve connectivity and provide a better customer experience. Our Water ambulance service and rescue team are prepared to respond within the shortest time possible to any emergency situation.”

    Chief Executive Officer Halo-Waters (Nigeria), Operators of Commercial Water Transport ( Lagos WaXi), Andrew Lana said: “It’s a milestone in the journey of putting in place efficient inter-modal human and goods transportation system and specifically in-land water ways transportation by the Lagos State Government through the provision of infrastructure and enabling environment that engenders continuous private sector investments in the sector. The users of the terminal shall experience world class customer service, given the facilities and services promised by the operators of the terminal and commercial boats.

    “As an operator, we are excited that finally, outbound and inbound passengers can experience convenient, safe and reliable water transport service in Ikorodu”, he added.

  • Lagos to engage Olusosun Dump scavengers

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode has assured  scavengers and other workers at the Olusosun dump that he would help them find ways of earning a living without risking their lives.

    In a statement at the weekend,   Ambode’s Chief Press Secretary Habib Aruna said the governor spoke when he visited the dump follwing Wednesday’s fire. The dump is still emitting smoke, which is affecting motorists’ visibility.

    The governor noted  that there was need to engage the scavengers and workers following the dump’s closure.

    According to him, the location of the facility is no longer healthy for traders and residents.

    The facility’s structure, he added,  was also risky and susceptible to  hazards such as fire.

    Ambode said : “We thank God nothing bad happened to those living there and around the neighbourhood. What we have decided now is that there will not be dumping of refuse here any longer.

    “But the most important aspect of it is that I cannot open my eyes and allow diseases to befall you here.

    “You may not have diseases now, but there is no way you can say you are looking for money without contending with series of hazards and a clear example is the fire outbreak.

    “At the end of the day, it is government that will still care for you. So, we have to sit down and agree’’.

    The governor said it was not government’s intention to make people lose their means of livelihood, adding that all the stakeholders must agree on what to be done going forward.

    “We are not here to cause pain for you, we will engage all of you on how we can improve on the environment and also make life bearable for you and your children,” Ambode said.

  • Lagos trains top officials

    Lagos State Government has held training for top officials including the permanent secretaries to meet the challenges of the 21st century through the ‘Change Mindset Advocacy programme.’

    The training, aimed at cultivating in public servants, the right culture and mind-set needed to attain the smart city status of the state.

    Speaking on Tuesday at the training programme organised for permanent secretaries, heads of agencies and parastatals in the state, Commissioner for Information and Strategy Kehinde Bamigbetan, said the government had since realised the importance of changing the mind-set of public servants to align with the ever changing time.

    According to Bamigbetan, “we have 24 million Lagosians; many of them travel a lot and are exposed to international standards, while some have become sophisticated. Therefore, the benchmark for services has increased, and people can compare how they are served in public service in Lagos with the private sector.”

    Earlier, the Director-General, Office of Transformation, Creativity and Innovation, Toba Otusanya said the expected outcome of the training and the sensitisation are civil servants who are competent, knowledgeable, creative, innovative and can challenge the status quo, adding that they would embrace new ways of doing things as well as deliver services in better ways.

    “Realising this vision is not something that is farfetched because when you look at strong public institutions across the world like Kenya and Rwanda, these things are already happening there; Lagos cannot continue to be on the side-line, we have to take the bull by the horn”, he said.

    He said Governor Akinwunmi Ambode in his quest to accelerate development in the state, realised the critical role of public servants in this regard, hence, his support for this campaign to ensure that all public servants embrace the “Growth Mind-set” and be well equipped for the challenges of the modern world.

  • Lagos, garbage and its profiteers 

    When this writer and the likes of Professor Pat Utomi, Sahara desert explorer Newton Jibunoh, Wasiu Ayinde Marshal (KWAM 1) and Lagbaja were named Lagos State Ambassadors for Environment in 2009, then Governor Tunde Fashola was trenchant in his expectation: deploy your individual talent and platform to help create awareness for the sustainability of the environment in a world ensnared by climate change.

    As we left the inauguration ceremony that day, I doubt if anyone of us harboured the illusion that what lay ahead was a glamour ride. I am sure most left with a sobering feeling that it was a crusade with an ambitious mission – seeking to alter behavior at the cultural realm.

    While then making allowance for some distractions – if not resistance – along the way, nothing could have prepared anyone for the recent abrupt reversal of progress thought already made with the resurgence of garbage on Lagos highways, beginning from the last Yuletide season. As giant flies and rodents feasted away, so have vultures been encircling the Lagos skyline ominously.

    The easy conjecture is to scapegoat the new waste manager, Visionscape, for this. In retrospect, it must be admitted that the meltdown would probably have been mitigated, if not totally avoided, had Visionscape phased its intervention in pilot schemes, learning and fine-tuning things along the way before scaling up.

    By the terms of the original transition arrangement, the new concessionaire was expected to concentrate on residential neighborhoods while the existing PSP operators were to manage commercial and industrial avenues. (The former accounts for 40 percent of the waste generated while the latter produces the rest.)

    But having said that, holding Visionscape solely responsible for the resurgent mountains of garbage along the highways will amount to a poor reading of the dark forces actually at play. Let it be recognized that the garbage heaps are only a manifestation of a vicious power-play going on.

    Entrenched interests are certainly up in arms against a bold attempt by the Akinwumni Ambode administration to fast-track reforms in a sector that otherwise impacts the daily existence of over 20 million residents.

    They are to be located between the PSP cartel, the nest of unscrupulous civil servants and maybe the rank of those who lost out in the bid process. (Some of the biggest names in international environmental management such as Veolia, Averda and Suez Environment had expressed interest through strategic partnerships with local partners in the tender process.)

    Of course, experience readily shows that beneficiaries of any pre-existing order are never willing to forfeit privileges or go down without a fight.

    Like sharks, the PSP operators chose to sink their fangs where it hurts most.

    Knowing the bulk of the fleet of compactors ordered by the new concessionaire were still in transit, they not only downed tools but also rushed to the court to file suits against the authorities and Visionscape. Without having a full complement of equipment needed to effectively cover Lagos at that point, it was only natural Visionscape would encounter acute operational difficulties.

    The lesson: the old structure that had served the city need not have been pulled down in one fell swoop overnight. At least, that would have afforded the powerful PSP cartel enough cool-off time.

    Authorities believe the barrage of attack is the handiwork of beneficiaries of the old order. Well, that should be expected. Only a fortnight ago, the state government had paraded a PSP operator allegedly caught willfully discharging garbage on the highway at night. Of course, the motive could only be to cast Visionscape in bad light.

    Anyone still in doubt as per the length such interests could go only needs to check and feel the ferocity of a multi-faceted smear campaign waged against Visionscape in the social media in the past two weeks and its promoters being called unprintable names. Haba!

    For instance, issue is made of the N50b investment in the undertaking. But those who think that is on the high side could not be said to be mindful of the size of Lagos population.

    Elsewhere in Ondo, another waste concessionaire, ZL Global Alliance Nigeria Limited, is shopping for N7b in funds, according to the CEO, Mrs. Abiola Bashorun. Tellingly, whereas Ondo generates 660 tonnes of waste daily with a population of less than 4 million, Lagos generates whopping 13,000 tonnes with a population of over 20 million.

    But the brickbats from the ongoing turf war aside, there can be no dispute on the clarity of Ambode’s dream and sense of urgency needed to bring same to fruition. The kernel is to have the over 13,000 tonnes of waste generated daily turned into value-creation, consistent with the vision of a smart city.

    Surely, filthy beaches and slimy waterways have no place in the megacity of the future.

    Indeed, waste management is not limited to residential neighborhoods alone. Even more daunting is the challenge of industrial waste. As more corporate citizens are born so is the risk of industrial pollution rising. A more robust regulatory and monitoring framework is surely needed to check the growing menace of unscrupulous manufacturers offloading toxic effluent into the waters indiscriminately. To say nothing about the hazards also posed by medical waste.

    Overall, the new thinking in sustainable environment management is such that integrates three key pillars: people, planet and profit. It means how we consume energy and conserve our environment impact directly on the economic health of the city which, in turn, dictate the quality of life we live.

    Of course, it has to be admitted that Lagos still lags behinds in terms of infrastructure to make this happen. The itinerant cart-pusher (Omolanke) of old was also a scavenger and a scourge. He eked a living from the garbage collected around the neighbour. And when no one was watching, he found somewhere to empty the filth amassed. The next day, the cycle was repeated.

    After the law banished the cart-pusher, PSP operators flooded the neighborhoods and the highways. Hundreds of them were licensed and paid to collect waste. Since government money was involved, the system soon got infected with some hanky-panky.

    For instance, stories are told of how the cartel in concert with some unscrupulous civil servants began to game the system mindlessly.

    Some would load big stones in their trucks and submit same for the tonnage to be weighed for payment. While Tunji Bello (now SSG) was still Environment Commissioner, that trick was foiled. Ownership of a compactor was thereafter made a pre-requisite.

    Before long, the buccaneers invented another trick: recycling. So, Operator A would, for instance, line up their fleet for official inspection and operation on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Same mostly rickety vehicles were passed on to Operator B who would bring them out on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.

    In effect, whereas two such players were listed and remunerated based on combined capacities of six trucks, the truth: only half of that actually existed.

    It was in an attempt to curb such sharp practices and infuse a fresh breath of air that Ambode, soon after assuming office, decided to turn the table. So, enter Visionscape.

    Regardless of the shortcomings at take-off, there is no denying the fact that effective waste management of the future in Lagos requires a big player like Visionscape expected to leverage its international partnerships to deliver a more livable and greener habitat for us.

    Mischief-makers ought to be told in unmistakable terms to cut it. It is a clarion call for for all reasonable people to join in the efforts to better our environment.

    Visionscape is expected to also provide an engineered sanitary landfill; upgrade and manage three transfer loading stations at Oshodi, Simpson and Agege as well as upgrade and manage waste depots at Ogudu, Mushin and Tapa.

    Driving along the Lekki highway the other day, one saw the upgrading works being done on the dumpsite at the Epe end. Beyond the remodeling, the one at Olusosun in Ojota should also be made to be more functional. As a matter of fact, part of the bargain is for Visionscape to provide alternatives to the Ojota dumpsite, a perennial source of noxious fumes and pungent stench for residents of that axis.

    Having surmounted the teething problems following the receipt of more operational equipment, we can only hope the concessionaire deliver promptly on the ancillary promises in due course. It is nice to see that, in conformity with United Nation guidelines for a humane and coordinated approach, some of the cart-pushers and the scavengers on dumpsites have been recruited and trained as landfill mining teams.

    Added to that is the 30,000 Community Sanitation Workers to be recruited under the Cleaner Lagos Initiative. We also look forward to seeing the much touted strategic partnership with recycling companies in action as part of the value chain.

     

  • Lagos denies increasing vehicle registration, number plate rates

    The Lagos State government has debunked rumours of increasing the cost of processing motor vehicle particulars and application for number plates.

    It said the rates remained the same across the state.

    A statement by the Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr Kehinde Bamigbetan, said the clarification was in response to enquiries by the public about the rumours of increases in charges relating to the motor vehicle administration.

    Bamigbetan said anyone with evidence of any increase in motor registration rates from any of the official centres managed by the State Motor Vehicle Administration Authority (MVAA) should report to the agency or the Ministry of Transportation.

    He said: “Although the cost of maintaining the roads and expanding infrastructure, which ease the operations of vehicles is enormous, the Lagos State government shall continue to bear the burden of keeping the roads motorable and safe for all users.”

    The commissioner said some people he described as mischief makers were cashing in on the challenges the new Land Use Charge Law, which seeks to raise more money for the provision of public infrastructure for the benefit of all, to misinform the public.

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode had debunked insinuations that many tax items were reviewed upward, adding that the claim was not true.

    Addressing reporters on Monday after leading a symbolic walk against sexual and domestic violence at Alausa in Ikeja, the state capital, Ambode said his administration was sensitive to the people and would not go all out to overburden them.

    He said: “I want Lagosians to understand one particular issue. We have over 300 tax items for which nothing has been touched, apart from this Land Use Charge, and maybe one other. But again, we are a very responsive government; we are very sensitive because at the end of the day, governance is about the people; it is about what they want.

    “…People might like that infrastructural development is on the progressive chart in Lagos, but also it comes with a price. But notwithstanding, in the middle of all that, a responsive government will listen to the yearnings of the people. At the end of the day, it’s all for the development of Lagos.

    “What this government is interested in is to create a trajectory and framework of permanent prosperity for Lagos. It is not about today; it is about the future. And if there is going to be permanent prosperity in Lagos, some things have to be done. But I can tell you, based on the dialogue and the things we have been receiving on the Land Use Charge, we would respond positively to those yearnings.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Lagos still interested in National Theatre

    Lagos State Commissioner for Tourism, Arts and Culture Mr. Steve Ayorinde has reiterated the government’s strong interest in having the National Theatre, Iganmu, ceded to Lagos by  the Federal Government.

    He said considering the state of the theatre, it required a strong, committed and competent  manager capable of restoring the various facilities originally provided by the 41-year-old edifice.

    Ayorinde, who spoke while hosting representatives of the Arts and Culture Writers Association of Nigeria (ACWAN) in his office in Lagos, disclosed that four of the six theatres being constructed by the state would be ready before the end of the year.

    The theatres, he said, are in Epe, Badagry, Igando and Opebi in Ikeja. He said Lagos was also regenerating the Glover Memorial Hall on Lagos Island, which hopefully would be completed by the first quarter of next year.

    “Four of the six theatres under construction will be ready later this year. The structures are almost done after which we will equip them. And part of what we are contemplating is should we have them function in dual capacity: theatre and as cinema. If we use theatre as venue for cinema, it will not be ideal.

    “But because of land constraint, which we have overcome, theatres in Yaba and Ikorodu will be ready next year. Also, we are regenerating the Glover Memorial Hall on Lagos Island. The design is ready and will soon be made public in the media. We hope to complete it by first quarter of next year. We are still very interested in having the National Theatre ceded to us,” he added.

    He also disclosed that the State Master Plan would be unveiled in May to guide the administration of tourism promotion for the next 15 to 20 years in the state. “In the first two years, the master plan will handle issues like number of hotels, regulation of beaches, cleaning of waterways, what level of investment is required, what kind of support services is required, security, liaison with the Federal Government on issuing visa on arrival to tourists among others,”he said.

    On the recent listing of events on the state’s tourism calendar, he said the calendar would be updated regularly but that the government was targeting a minimum of 100 events in one year, which he said, is not too much for a mega city like Lagos.

    “We have listed about 70 events, but the calendar is not cast in stone and not exhaustive. It shows key programmes,which government will either directly fund or part-fund and those that it endorses. As we move along, the calendar will be updated and the essence of the calendar is to change the narrative of how culture programmes are reported and appreciated. As from next year, the calendar will be released by the beginning of the year,’’ he said.

  • 400 Voices resonates in Lagos

    The 20th edition of ‘Songs of Praise’, an annual mega choral concert organized by the Christ Apostolic Church (CAC), Alagomeji, Yaba, Lagos is scheduled to hold on Sunday, March 18, 2018.

    Featuring 400 Voices, the church’s Mass Choir, the concert holds between 5pm and 8pm.

    According to Pastor Sunday Ebenezer Oludare, the superintendent in-charge of Yaba District of the church, the programme was borne out of the need to spread the whole essence of using both classical and contemporary music and songs to worship God in a very special way.

    “It is usually time for music ministration,” said Oludare, who noted that the choir is affiliated to the London School of Music.

    “Indeed this church has produced the mass choir that we are proud of.  This year will be the 20th edition of it. Every year, we call together choristers from so many churches to be part of this.  It involves choirs that may not also be from CAC churches.  Yet the idea is usually to reach across to as many choirs as we can from across Lagos State.”

    The chairperson of the planning committee, Deaconess Shade Jacobs, said that it is beautiful the programme which started 20 years was coinciding with Lenten period.

    “So, we believe there is no better time for us to do it than now,” she said.

    400 Voices was mooted as a result of an invitation extended to the CAC, Yaba, in 1997 by the MUSON Centre, Lagos. After series of participations, the church decided to have its own programme tagged, ‘Songs of Praise,’ involving 400 Voices, with choirs drawn from other churches.

  • Lagos govt tackles water shortage

    The Lagos State government has said it is solving erratic power supply, which hinders production and supply of water across the state.

    A statement by the Head Corporate Communication of the state’s Water Corporation, Akinmuleya Oluwaferanmi, said the state had developed a Water Supply Master Plan (2010–2020) as a roadmap to tackling the challenge of water production and supply.

    The statement said: “The Lagos State government is taking a realistic approach to close water demand gap in the state by carrying out rehabilitation and expansion projects in different parts of the state. This involves the replacement of old pipes and extension of water mains, thereby increasing water supply in different parts of Lagos, especially in Surulere, Itire, Yaba/Ebute-Metta, Iwaya and Victoria Island, among others.”

  • Labourer charged with sexual assault

    A 23-year-old labourer, Peter Ochi, who allegedly assaulted three schoolgirls sexually, was on Monday brought before an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court.

    The accused, who resides at 9, Bishop Hugh St., College area of Ogba, Lagos, is facing a two-count charge of breach of peace and sexual assault.

    Police Prosecutor Clifford Ogu told the court that the accused committed the offences on Feb. 27 at Jerare Summit Secondary School, Ogba.

    Ogu said the accused, a non-teaching staff member in the school, invited the girls of ages 12, 14 and 15 to a corner and started touching their private parts.

    “One of the girls told their school counsellor what happened and the accused was arrested for further questioning.”

    The offences violated Sections 134 and 168 and of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    The accused, on conviction, may be jailed at least two years.

    The accused, however, denied the charge.

    In her ruling, Chief Magistrate Taiwo Akanni granted the accused bail in the sum of N100, 000 with two sureties in like sum.

    Akanni said the sureties should show evidence of tax payment to the Lagos State Government and adjourned the case until April 23.

    NAN

    Read Also: Police arrest couple for ‘sexual assault’ on domestic help

  • Lagos to host High School Band Challenge

    As a way of integrating secondary school students as an important socio-economic group towards attaining the vision for Greater Lagos, the Lagos State Government, in partnership with Entertainment Media Limited, Publishers of E24-7 Magazine and FlipTV, are organising an annual Lagos High School Band Challenge (LHSBC).

    The challenge, according to the conveners, is designed to be a live music competition among secondary school students in Lagos in both public and private schools across the state’s five educational and administrative divisions.

    The Ministry of  Tourism, Arts and Culture in a letter of endorsement noted  that the Governor Akinwumi Ambode-led administration “values the intention of Entertainment Media Limited to organise the Lagos High School Band Challenge, a secondary school focused talent hunt competition designed to promote the knowledge of live music and performance using musical instruments among students.”

    Expressing his appreciation to Lagos State Government for the partnership, Executive Producer and Chief Executive of Entertainment Media Limited, Biodun Kupoluyi, said LHSBC will help to discover and nurture musical talents among secondary school students in Lagos State.

    “We are happy that Lagos State Government is working with us on this project and has gone ahead to include it in its annual Tourism, Arts and Culture Calendar as one of the initiatives the state will promote. We welcome this endorsement from Lagos State Government and we have been challenged to inspire the students as the focus of the initiative,” he said.

    He further noted that the project is a Pan-Lagos Initiative that will involve Secondary School Students in both public and private schools across the five divisions of the state.

    “There will be the elimination stages, the quarter-final, semi-final and the grand finale where prizes will be won. The grand finale is scheduled to hold in June on World Music Day,” he added.