Enugu State has 68 development centres spread across the 17 local government areas of the state. Most of these centres have become comatose despite having salary-earning workers and administrators assigned to them. The decaying state of these centres is the focus of this report by Ben Aroh.
In 2003, the administration of former governor Chimaroke Nnamani created development centres in Enugu State. The goal was to bring development to rural areas. These centres statutorily have administrators, heads of departments, treasurers, heads of personnel management and employees, all gaining promotions and retiring, as the case may be. Former governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi saw the need for the centres, and increased them from 56 to 68. Employees of these development centres are drawn from the main LGAs where they were carved out from.
LGA Chairmen Destroyed Development Centres – Ex-administrator Alleges
Chief Kelvin Ezeugwu served as the administrator of Nsukka East Development Centre. He said the initiative was well-intended, but destroyed by council chairmen who see administrators of development centres as rivals.
In his words, “Former Governor Chimaroke Nnamani made the development centres equal to their main local government areas. If allocations for LGAs came, they would be shared equitably among the development centres and the main LGAs. Then if allocations for Nsukka LGA were released, they would be shared into four, with the main LGA taking the lion’s share. Then Nsukka East, Nsukka West and Nsukka Central would get theirs to develop their respective areas.
“But when former Gov Sullivan Chime came, he made development centres to be under council chairmen. That was where the trouble started. The idea was that administrators would be taking directives from council chairmen. Some council chairmen never allowed their administrators to do anything, except receiving their salaries, and maybe their imprest. In our own case, we were getting our salaries and our imprests. I managed our markets and the borrow pit at Opi. From there, revenue was generated for developmental purposes.”
Samie Agbo also served as an administrator. He said, “Development centres are subordinates to the main local governments. This is unlike the Local Council Development Authorities in Lagos state which are independent, and being funded by the state government.
“In Enugu, when they were created newly, administrators were entitled to a vehicle each, and members constituted to run the affairs of the centres. They have offices. But the aim was defeated. I can tell you as an ex-administrator that the present administrators are only getting their salaries. Some members of the development centres do not even know the headquarters of their centres. Some don’t even have offices at all.
“When allocations come, most administrators won’t even know. In fact, some of the development centres have been shut. Some of them were told to join the parent LGAs. But they have everything that is obtainable in the main LGAs, such as HODs. Those that have existing structures have abandoned them, or rented them out. Most of these centres do not have chairs.
“Gov Peter Mbah was part of the Nnamani administration that created these development centres, so I guess he knows the brain behind the initiative. When he went for campaigns, he went to those centres to reach the people better. These centres should be more viable because they are closer to the people. Development centres should be able to handle schools and health centres managements in their respective domains. They should be made to be in-charge of IGR points within their areas. They should be able to generate their own revenue. If development centres should run properly, it will lead to rapid rural development.”
Development Centres Exist In Name – Workers
Some staff members of development centres claim the centres are ‘dead’. One of them working in Igboeze North, on condition of anonymity, said, “These centres were created to serve as pay points. Some of the buildings were rented just to serve that purpose. Earmarking of funds to the centres ended with former governor Nnamani. After him, the concept died. The problem is that activities of LGAs were centralised, thus weakened these centres. These centres have environmental hazards. Who will clear the bushes? What business have administrators going there when nothing is going on? There are over forty-seven workers at Ette Development Centre, for instance. It has an administrator, and about nine caretaker members who are appointed for political reasons.
“But workers have abandoned the place. They only go to work on Mondays to clock in and clock out following the directive of the governor that workers must work on Mondays, being sit-at-home. But they rather go to the central LGA, and not development centres. The whole place is being occupied by snakes and other dangerous organisms, and overgrown by weeds.”
This report is published with the support of Civic Media Lab.