Tag: NULGE

  • Osun Local Government Workers Resume Work After 11-Month Strike

    Osun Local Government Workers Resume Work After 11-Month Strike

    Figures cited by Vanguard show that local government workers in Osun State have officially resumed their duties following a grueling 11-month industrial action. The strike was sparked by a violent clash between APC and PDP supporters over the control of local council secretariats last year. The Association of Concerned Local Government Workers (ACCLGW) has now urged its members to ‘eschew violence’ and maintain professional ethics as they return to their desks.

    The resumption follows a series of mediation efforts led by traditional rulers and the state government. While the political dispute over council leadership remains in court, a temporary agreement was reached to allow administrative staff to return to ensure that basic services, such as waste management and primary health monitoring, are restored to the communities.

    Validation of this return to work was provided by The Punch and Daily Post. The Punch noted that ‘council secretariats were heavily guarded by police on Monday morning,’ while Daily Post quoted a union leader: ‘Our priority is the welfare of our members and the service to the people of Osun.’

    Echotitbits take: An 11-month strike is a catastrophic failure of local governance. While the staff are back, the ‘peace’ is fragile and entirely dependent on the upcoming court ruling regarding the local government elections. Watch for whether the Ademola Adeleke administration can maintain this truce without further political skirmishes.
    Source: Vanguard – https://www.vanguardngr.com/2026/01/11-months-after-strike-union-warns-workers-against-violence/ January 5, 2026

    Photo Credit: Vanguard

  • Local Councils Press Tinubu for Direct Allocations as States Hold Trillions

    Local Councils Press Tinubu for Direct Allocations as States Hold Trillions

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-23 09:00:00

    Reporting by The Punch indicates local government stakeholders are intensifying calls for direct disbursement of council allocations, arguing that state-level handling of the funds weakens grassroots service delivery.

    The push is framed as a continuation of the post–Supreme Court autonomy debate—demanding that councils receive money straight from the federation account rather than through state intermediaries.

    Supporters say direct access will improve accountability and ensure funds go to primary healthcare, rural roads, sanitation, and local economic activity instead of being diluted by state politics.

    State governments, however, have historically resisted reforms that reduce their control over local funding structures, meaning enforcement mechanisms—not just court rulings—remain the key battleground.

    Validation: Daily Times recalls the Supreme Court position, stating it is “unconstitutional for state governments to retain or manage funds meant for local councils.” Meanwhile, ABN TV repeats the core claim: “state governments received control over at least N7.43tn meant for local government councils…”

    Echotitbits take: Nigeria’s local governance problem isn’t only “how much money,” but “who controls it.” Watch for enforcement: executive orders, FAAC remittance redesign, and whether states respond with political workarounds.

    Source: The Punch — December 23, 2025 (https://punchng.com/autonomy-battle-lgs-demand-direct-funds-as-states-receive-n7-43tn/)
    The Punch 2025-12-23