Delegates at the National Conference
Committee on Wednesday unanimously adopted the recommendation of the Confab
Committee on Public Service that legislators at the National Assembly and state
levels should function on part-time basis to reduce cost of governance in the
country.
The committee chaired by a former Head of
Civil Service of the Federation, Mrs. Ebele Okeke, had also called for the
review of the salaries of the legislators towards ensuring that their allowances
“should be comparable with what obtains in other arms of the public service.”
But when the issue was put to vote,
delegates adopted the recommendation for part-time legislature in the National
Assembly and state Houses of Assembly.
However, the recommendation of the
committee for upward review of retirement age to 65 years of age or 40 years of
service from the present practice of 60 years of age or 35 years of service,
elicited uproar among the delegates on Wednesday in Abuja.
Okeke had, while opening the debate on
the committee’s report before adjournment the previous day, said that it was
the recommendation of the committee that payment of pension, life insurance and
severance for legislators, where they exist, should be cancelled in line with global
best practices.
But a delegate representing the youth at
the conference, Mr. Charles Linvinus Ibiang, rejected the recommendation for
upward review of the retirement age of the civil servants, on the premise that
the older ones should give way to the younger ones to also make contribution to
national development.
The Okeke-led committee had also
recommended that ministers, commissioners and local government chairmen should
discontinue appointment of ‘Special Advisers’ and Special Assistants’ as a cost-saving
measure to reduce cost of governance.
The committee argued that these
categories of political office holders should utilize the staff of their
ministries where it becomes necessary as contained in Circular Ref.
No.B63833/73 of January 3, 2000.
It said, “While it is appreciated that
the nature of presidential system of government necessitates the appointment of
‘Special Advisers’ and Special Assistants’ to the President, the Vice
President, the Governor and the Deputy Governor, its extension to ministers,
commissioners and local government chairmen should be discontinued as a
cost-saving measure.”
Sourced: PUNCH
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