Osun State Governor, Rauf Aregbesola, Tuesday announced the creation of additional 31 local council development areas, three area councils and two administrative offices, saying his administration will make judicious use of its revenues in such a way that the increase won’t constitute any financial burden.
This was even as he dissolved the management committees of the existing 30 local councils and area office and their executive secretaries, deputy executive secretaries, members, special advisers and other functionaries.
The governor made the announcement in a state broadcast to the people of the state.
Aregbesola said the people of the state requested for additional local councils, and after several legal procedures the request was sent to the Osun State House of Assembly in form of an executive bill.
The House looked into the bill, set up a committee and subsequently, a referendum was held on February 19, 2015 in which the people of the state overwhelmingly gave a Yes vote on the bill.
The House passed the bill creating 31 new LCDAs, three area councils and two administrative offices and it was signed into law by the governor.
Aregbesola, speaking on why the state is creating more councils at a time of financial challenges, held that his administration has given it sufficient consideration, saying he has put in place procedures that will cost less and safe money thus bringing rapid development.
He added that the primary responsibilities of the newly created councils are to bring development to the people, market management, revenue mobilisation and generation among many others instrumental to the yearnings of the people.
The governor stated that the state will be saving huge cost with the new system adding that the same number of staff will still run all the councils and no new appointments will be made to existing ones.
He hinted that the entire local government system will be managed by council managers for three months, adding that managers shall be appointed and deployed by Local Government Service Commission from among the substantive grade level 14 officers in the local governments.
“Many would be wondering and asking: why create more councils at this special time of financial challenges? We have also given sufficient consideration to this. With this new parliamentary system, it will cost less to run the new councils and save a lot of money for the government than in the past.
“The primary responsibilities of our new local government system are sanitation, market management and revenue mobilisation and generation. This is consistent with local government administration worldwide.
“The beauty of this new system is its parliamentary nature, which requires the chairman and the vice chairman to be elected by the councillors from among their own ranks, thereby saving cost,” Aregbesola told the people of the state.