Audio By Carbonatix
Delays in the dispatch of funds and other resources from the national level to the regional and district levels had over the years retarded the execution of development projects and other programmes throughout the country.
Most districts are yet to receive their 2007 last quarter share of the District Assembly Common Fund, thereby compelling them to roll over projects that were supposed to be executed before the year.
These were contained in findings of a research carried out by the Centre for Budget Advocacy (CBA) of Integrated Social Development Centre (ISODEC) in the Northern, Brong Ahafo, Western and the Upper West regions.
The study research, among other things looked into the performance, problems and assistance for the Ministry of Education, Science and Sports and Ministry of Health and how they were coping with problems and challenges they faced in the course of their duties.
Mr. Nicholas Adamtey, the CBA Officer, disclosed these in a day's dissemination workshop for stakeholders at Wa in the Upper West.
He said, most of the District Assemblies that were solely dependant on funds from the central government had to abandon a lot of projects until they received their budgetary allocations.
Mr. Nicholas Adamtey also said shoddy work by some contractors in the country was due to the lack of effective supervision and monitoring.
He appealed to government to strengthen its supervision and monitoring units to enable them to perform their roles effectively to prevent waste of funds as had occurred over the years.
Mr. Adamtey suggested the involvement of civil society organisations in the day to day implementation to compel executors of such programmes do the right thing and on schedule to ensure judiciously utilization of government funds.
He said research also revealed that, although certain budgets were often approved, the funds were not received, paving way for a lot of speculations and blame games.
Mr. Adamtey therefore appealed to government to expedite action on the release of funds to give the communities their needed development and to encourage foreign donors to assist the country.
Some of the participants from the Ghana Health Service complained about the usage of "Musugu" a local herb, by the people in the region, who believed it could facilitate the delivery by pregnant women.
They said although several educational programmes had been adopted to discourage pregnant women from using such herbs since it could be dangerous to their uterus, some of them were still using it leading to some deaths.
The participants also appealed to health workers, especially nurses to treat their clients courteously.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Free Speech development in Ghana today and its implications for media development
21 seconds -
NACOC to commemorate International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit trafficking
2 minutes -
Dafeamekpor calls for AU early warning system against Xenophobic violence
16 minutes -
South Africa risks undermining its moral authority through Xenophobia – Dafeamekpor
19 minutes -
Dafeamekpor condemns Xenophobic attacks in South Africa, calls for continental action
23 minutes -
Ghana’s new investment law to reduce bureaucracy, strengthen investor confidence – GIPC CEO
27 minutes -
Let’s begin trial in absentia against Ofori-Atta if necessary – PAC Vice Chair
29 minutes -
Ghana to court global investors at FIFA World Cup 2026 through Invest Ghana Business Forums
30 minutes -
I didn’t need parliamentary approval to suspend KATH CEO—Health Minister
34 minutes -
Green Card does not guarantee immunity, but strengthens Ofori-Atta’s legal argument – Amanda Clinton
39 minutes -
Bond market: Turnover rises by 343% to GH¢7.16bn
44 minutes -
GBLA 2026 set to honour business excellence and leadership
54 minutes -
Feed Ghana programme targets tomato self-sufficiency to stabilise prices
55 minutes -
Intelligence is accumulated experience in motion
1 hour -
MoFA distributes 40k bags of fertilizer, drones to boost food production in Northern Ghana
1 hour