Audio By Carbonatix
Upper West Regional Director of Ghana Education Service (GES), Duncan Nsoh, has said the education governing body would soon introduce a programme that will group workers into districts and municipal assemblies to enhance effective monitoring.
The programme when successfully rolled out and implemented would upload all workers into various districts for effective monitoring and quality delivery of services since supervisors could easily identify absenteeism and other bad tendencies that retarded progress.
Mr Nsoh was addressing members of Tertiary Education Workers Union in Wa during the Union’s 60th-anniversary celebration organised on under theme: “60 years of TEWU’s contribution to the development of equitable, inclusive and quality education delivery in Ghana”.
He said negative tendencies like lateness, absenteeism and drunkenness by teachers, retarded quality education delivery, hence, the need for education policies to be decentralized to ensure effective monitoring.
According to him, per Ghana’s labour laws, about five per cent of workers were supposed to be fired at the end of every month for low performance but the laws were not working.
“It is hardly to hear or see any worker in Ghana fired for non-performance or bad attitudes but people would witness more firings in my outfit,” he said.
He added that promoting workers in the education sector was no more going to be on tribal, political or religious basis but to be determined on merits and competencies.
He urged the rank and file of TEWU as a vibrant union to either put up their best to be appreciated or face the consequences of non-performance.
He promised to address some discrepancies and inequalities with regards to promotions and conditions of service among workers of equal ranks as well as consider temporal non-teaching staff for recruitment.
Mr Mark D. Korankye, Acting General-Secretary of TEWU, expressed worry over poor condition of service affecting non-teaching staff in the education sector and appealed to the Regional Education Directorate to address their grievances.
He said inequalities between teaching non-teaching staff within the Union especially on how workers overstressed the workers particularly in the implementation of the double track education system.
He was also not happy that allowances for Security personnel under the education sector have been scrapped and do not appear from the payslip members.
Mr Francis Kokoih, the Upper West Regional Chairman of TEWU, said education was a business that involved everybody since teachers used them as examples in classes to sensitise students against tramadol abuse and smoking.
He said some non-teaching staff do a lot of work but little or no recognition was given to them in terms of promotions and staff upgrading.
Latest Stories
-
2026 U20 WWCQ: Black Princesses beat South Africa to make final round
14 minutes -
World Para Athletics: UAE Ambassador applauds Ghana for medal-winning feat
1 hour -
Photos: Ghana’s path to AU Chairmanship begins with Vice Chair election
1 hour -
Chinese business leader Xu Ningquan champions lawful investment and deeper Ghana–China trade ties
1 hour -
President Mahama elected AU First Vice Chair as Burundi takes over leadership
2 hours -
Police work to restore calm and clear road after fatal tanker crash on Suhum–Nsawam Highway
2 hours -
Four burnt, several injured in Nsawam-Accra tanker explosion
3 hours -
Police arrest suspect in murder of officer at Zebilla
4 hours -
SUSEC–Abesim and Adomako–Watchman roads set for upgrade in Sunyani
4 hours -
CDD-Ghana calls for national debate on campaign financing
5 hours -
INTERPOL’s decision on Ofori-Atta: What it means for his U.S. bond hearing and the legal road ahead
5 hours -
Parties can use filing fees to cover delegates’ costs, end vote-buying – Barker-Vormawor
5 hours -
Boxing in Bukom: Five months without the bell
5 hours -
Political parties can end vote-buying by disqualifying offenders – Barker-Vormawor
5 hours -
Ministry of Gender investigates alleged sharing of intimate videos by foreign national
6 hours
