The
Minister of Local Government, Alhaji Collins Dauda, has joined many
Ghanaians to criticize the high cost and inferior quality of state
funded projects as against projects executed by companies and
philanthropic organisations in the same locality.
Stalwart in
opposition political parties have had cause to question the cost of
several government projects with allegations of paddling up cost flying
about the government has always been defensive and justified cost of all
projects.
It is expected that with the Minister of Local
Government adding his voice, a healthy debate would be sparked to
a-certain the true and actual cost of the various government projects.
Addressing
the opening session of a two-day workshop in Kumasi last Thursday to
enhance the capacity of presiding members, Alhaji Dauda also expressed
worry as to why, although such government-sponsored projects are more
expensive than those funded by private entities, the privately sponsored
projects usually have a longer lifespan and are of higher quality.
To
buttress his point and to pour out his frustrations, the Minister cited
instances when, in the Asutifi South Constituency in the Brong Ahafo
region, he had seen cracks in the walls of buildings sponsored by the
government soon after they had been handed over to the assembly.
‘We
all know the cost of six classroom blocks constructed by a government
agency in a particular community and the other by a mining company in
the same area as its social responsibility.’
He wondered how a
six-classroom block constructed in the same locality by some private
companies with similar materials bought from the same market and the
same kind of labour tended to produce better quality structures at lower
cost than the one executed by government agencies.
‘There must be something wrong with our system’, he observed.
He further chastised supervisors of various government projects for not putting up their best in playing their roles.
It
would be recalled that the President John Dramani Mahama at the
sod-cutting ceremony of the 172 million dollar project Kasoa Interchange
Projects, reacted to critics who said the cost of the project had been
inflated.
‘When you are a political quantity surveyor and you
look at Kasoa interchange and you say it is too expensive, what are you
talking about? You haven’t seen the scope of works, you haven’t seen the
bill of quantities, you haven’t done a survey of building materials
around here and you are able to judge that the cost is too expensive.’ |
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