- Safiu Kehinde
Sequel to the Supreme Court’s verdict on Local Government financial autonomy, the Lagos State House of Assembly has allayed concern over the fate of the state’s 37 Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs) as it prepares for another public hearing on the state’s Local Government Adminstration Bill 2024 before the assembly.
The Speaker, Mudashiru Obasa made this known at a plenary on Monday in Lagos.
Prior to yesterday’s plenary, the bill was presented for hearing last week Thursday but the lawmakers proposed another public hearing due to low publicity.
The Speaker said after due consultation, the House had agreed to conduct another public hearing on the bill .
He disclosed that the House would invite the Attorney-General of the state, Mr Lawal Pedro, for an interpretation of the recent Supreme Court judgement on financial autonomy for local governments.
The speaker noted that the proposed bill was not to scrap the existing 37 LCDAs but to strengthen them based on the ruling of the Supreme Court on financial autonomy of the Local Government.
Obasa said the bill would further strengthen the LCDAs, adding that the Assembly was trying to do was to look at the recent Supreme Court judgement in terms of the state and local governments joint account.
“I agree on the need for us to schedule a second allotted day for the public hearing because I have been inundated with calls by people who wanted to know the fate of the LCDAs.
“We are not scrapping the LDCAs. Rather, what we are trying to do is to look at the recent Supreme Court judgement in terms of Lagos and local governments joint account.
“This is to fashion out a way where the parent local governments and the LDCAs can work together ,” he said.
The Speaker also said there was the need to work for the formal listing of the LCDAs by the National Assembly.
He noted that Kano State has 44 local governments and out of Kano, Jigawa was created and has 27 LGAs.
Also speaking, the Chairman, House Committee on Local Government, Mr Sanni Okanlawon, while giving a report on the public hearing, said many of the stakeholders invited for the event could not attend.
He attributed the poor attendance to the weather condition of the day just as he prayed the House to approve a second allotted day for the exercise.
On his part, Mr Desmond Elliot(APC-Surulere 1) noted that because of the size of the state in terms of population and its economic importance to Nigeria, it was imperative to work for the listing of the LCDAs.
“Anambra state has 21 local governments and it is nowhere close to what Lagos has in terms of resources, economic importance and dividends of democracy,” he said.