
Audio By Carbonatix
The Volta Regional Director of the National Disaster Management Organization (NADMO), Ivy Mawufemor Amewugah has reiterated the need for the department of town council under local government to be revived in order to ensure a well and better clean Ghana.
After a clean-up exercise organized by her outfit, Ms Amewugah made the comments in collaboration with the 66 artillery regiment, other security agencies, and the Ho Municipal assembly.
She recounted the once vibrant town council workers who always made sure that every area was clean and tidy and that people who couldn't help keep their areas clean were charged.
"In those days, the council was very vibrant. You could see the workers in people's houses, markets areas and workplaces just to ensure that the environment was clean but now we don't see that anymore," Ivy said.

The Director remembered how vibrant the town councilors were and the enthusiasm of residents to ensure a clean environment and said, the town council should be reconsidered.
Ivy, however, encouraged the environmental health unit to do more in this regard and also to government to help revive the town council department
She noted that it is necessary to have the council unit well revived to help the environmental health team and other health agencies to have a well and healthy environment.
She said the Volta regional NADMO will always help to make sure that Volta Region remains the cleanest Region in the country.
Pascal Agbagba of the Regional NADMO office urged residents along the road especially those around the drains should stop dumping refuse upstream resulting in chocked gutters and preventing the free flow of water in those areas.
Pascal Agbagba commended Zoomlion Waste Management Company for helping with their bins for the exercise.
He said it was necessary to keep the environment clean to avoid flooding as a result of choked gutters.
Commanding Officer of the 66 artillery regiment Lt. Col. Edward Sarpong Appiah whose outfit took part in the exercise admonished residents to be law-abiding and always keep their environment clean to avoid flooding during the rainy season.
In early 2000 in Ghana, town council service was vibrant when officers from the department move from household to household to inspect if residents keep their surroundings clean and healthy and defaulters were been fined or prosecuted.
Latest Stories
-
Kwasi Pratt questions President’s helicopter tour of flood-hit areas, urges stronger ground engagement
8 minutes -
Flood victims to receive free psychological counselling as experts call for flexible work policies
18 minutes -
NADMO says it warned of heavy rains and took steps to reduce flooding in Accra
26 minutes -
Henry Quartey blames weak enforcement for worsening Accra floods
29 minutes -
India asks WhatsApp to pause username feature rollout over fraud concerns
32 minutes -
South African state complicit in xenophobic violence – Fiifi Boafo
35 minutes -
NPP North East Regional Secretary declares bid for chairman position, says he’s tried and tested
46 minutes -
Bus fares, rent, and school fees push Ghana’s inflation to 5.3% in June
52 minutes -
WANEP urges stronger youth inclusion in West Africa’s political decision-making
53 minutes -
GES debunks viral claim that floodwaters destroyed WASSCE papers
55 minutes -
Mindful Governance brings Karl George MBE’s AI Wake-Up Call to Ghana’s boards
59 minutes -
Solomon Owusu accuses South African government of backing attacks on Ghanaians
1 hour -
Henry Quartey calls for broader representation on government’s Anti-Flood Taskforce
1 hour -
Finance Ministry releases GH¢350 million for flood relief and mitigation following Mahama directive
2 hours -
Flood-hit Ghana Digital Centres says staff not dismissed, contracts only temporarily suspended
2 hours