Audio By Carbonatix
The Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) in the Volta region has warned that food vendors who fail to acquire the necessary certifications will not be allowed to do business.
This initiative is geared towards ensuring that food vendors meet the health requirements and comply with the health measures to curb the outbreak of infectious diseases.
This came up during a sensitisation exercise undertaken in Ho's regional capital.
Food vendors were educated on the need to acquire certification before engaging in business as efforts are being made to curb poisoning and outbreaks of communicable diseases.
They were also advised to operate in a hygienic environment to ensure their clients' safety.
Regional Director of the FDA, Gordon Akurugu, detailed the objectives of the ‘No Street Food Vending Permit, No Business’ campaign in an interview with JoyNews.
“Food and Drugs Authority as a regulator is mandated by the Public Act 851 to ensure the safety and quality of food products. As part of executing our mandate, we collaborated strongly with Environmental Health of the District Assembly to sensitise street food vendors. This is a project dear to the heart of the FDA CEO and all management.”
“We want to ensure that food and drug regulation should go to the grassroots [and] not necessarily the restaurants, the chop bars. The main objective is no street food permit, no business; that is just the objective, but regulation should not be forced, regulation should not be policing [but] regulation should gear towards compliance,” he said.

Volta Regional Environmental Health Officer, Stella Kumedzro, indicated that the exercise would not be a one-stop activity but would be done annually.
“The permit, the certificate is supposed to be renewed yearly. For the certification, before we certify a street food vendor, we are looking for certain things; we screen for Hepatitis B, we screen for typhoid, we screen for helminthic diseases – those are some of the communicable diseases that are foodborne, so when we screen and we realise that a vendor is infected with those diseases, we do not stop there, we do not ask them to stop their business, but we further refer them to a healthcare facility, get yourself treated and come back into business.”
“By so doing, we are saving the life of that vendor. Most vendors that we screen are not aware that they are infected with those sicknesses, but after the screening, they get to know they are treated, and they continue with their business,” she added.
Some of the vendors were issued with certificates and Veronica buckets. The FDA hopes all other vendors within the jurisdiction would comply and acquire the certifications.
Latest Stories
-
Deputy Transport Minister praises MPS investment at Tema Port
28 minutes -
Nearly 3,000 patients a day face corridor care in NHS
30 minutes -
US dismantles West African birth tourism network, revokes over 100 visas
45 minutes -
Author urges Ghanaians to reconnect with their roots at launch of Amane Adesa: Of Monsters and Gods
46 minutes -
Afoko donates 400 bags of cement, GH¢30,000 towards completion of Volta NPP head office
1 hour -
Health Ministry backs conviction of man who assaulted midwife at Tema Community 22 Polyclinic
1 hour -
Greater Accra REGSEC lists flood-prone areas as GMet forecasts 100–150mm rainfall in June
1 hour -
Suppliers to picket Education Ministry over GH¢50m Free SHS debt
1 hour -
Fisheries Minister cracks down on premix fuel overpricing and mismanagement of community funds
1 hour -
From unsafe sanitation to thriving businesses: How SNV is changing lives in Nandom
2 hours -
Operationalise Trede Agenda 111 Hospital to ease pressure on KATH – Dr Kingsley Agyemang urges government
2 hours -
Ghana Water Ltd inaugurates Governing Council for Water Institute
2 hours -
Agbodza raises alarm over traffic light board theft in front of police headquarters
2 hours -
See the areas that will be affected by ECG’s planned maintenance on Thursday (June 11, 2026)
2 hours -
2 rescued alive after road crash on Kpeve–Peki highway
2 hours