BONGO D.A SPONSORS NURSING & OTHER STUDENTS 16 - 09 -2016
The
Bongo District Assembly in its efforts to augment staff numbers in the health
sector has spent 15,000.00 Ghana Cedis on the sponsorship of 15 first-year
nursing students. The beneficiary students received 1,000.00 Ghana Cedis each
and are expected to periodically receive similar financial support from the
Assembly till they complete.
Bongo
District Chief Executive [DCE], Mr. Alexis Ayamdor Adugdaa disclosed this in
his address at the 3rd ordinary meeting of the 2nd session of the 7th Bongo
District Assembly. He added that the students and the Assembly had accordingly
signed a memorandum of understanding for the former to serve at various health
facilities across the district over a stipulated period of time upon
completion.
The
DCE further disclosed that, the Upper East Regional Minister, Mr. Albert Abongo
who is also the outgoing Member of Parliament [MP] for the Bongo Constituency
has over the past few months disbursed 75,000.00 Ghana Cedis from his MP’s
Common Fund to several female students pursuing various courses in nursing and
teaching. He noted that this gesture by the MP had taken off a huge burden on
parents many of whom would have had huge financial challenges in settling their
children’s education bills all by themselves.
Mr.
Adugdaa also revealed that the Assembly had completed and furnished four CHPS
compounds with funds from the District Development Fund while two additional
CHPS facilities at the Amanga and Goo-Awaah communities had reached various
levels of completion. Meanwhile, the Abokobiisi and Sikabiisi CHPS compounds as
well as the Feo Clinic whose roofs were ripped off in a rainstorm that hit the
district in May 2016 had since been fixed and delivery of health care services
running smoothly.
On
Agriculture, he said the Department of Agriculture had initiated measures to
register farmers across the district to benefit from the Government’s
fertilizer subsidy and that so far, 6,428 farmers had been registered and
purchases of the subsidised fertilizers ongoing. Meanwhile, the Department in
collaboration with development partners was also undertaking field
demonstrations and varietal trials over a farmland area of 45 hectares. Crops
including cow pea, maize, millet, groundnuts and sorghum are being cultivated
under the trials.
Touching
on the revenue performance of the district from January to August 2016, the DCE
announced that an amount of 115,703.60 Ghana Cedis was collected as against an
expenditure of 117,332.22 Cedis indicating an expenditure over income of
1,528.62 Ghana Cedis. He however explained that, the reason for the over
expenditure resulted from a balance carried forward from 31st December, 2015 to
January, 2016.
Chief
Executive Officer of the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority [SADA], Dr.
Charles Abugre who was also invited to address the General Assembly, noted that
the Bongo District Assembly and other sister districts could make enormous
contributions to the greening of the SADA zone by incorporating tree planting
into the awards of contracts for the construction of school blocks and health
facilities. He also urged the Assembly to undertake prospecting for mineral
deposits and proceed to secure land leases from the appropriate state agencies
so that in future, it could either sell out these leases to investors or
partner them to make wealth for the other developmental purposes.
Meanwhile,
Dr. Emmanuel Arhin, a Regolith and Exploration Geologist with the Faculty of
Earth and Environmental Science at the University for Development Studies in
presenting his findings on an “Exploration and Evaluation of Clay Deposits and
Dimension Stones in Bongo District”, revealed that the research which commenced
by late 2015 showed that the Bongo rock deposits had as many as eight to 10
different kinds of rocks. He noted that in today’s world of decorations for
houses and other types of buildings, floor tiles made from natural rock were
about the most expensive because they were environmentally friendly and their
artistic view is superb.
Dr.
Arhin noted that the Bongo rocks fall in the category that suits the
manufacture of these types of tiles and other ceramic ware that could be used
for floor tiling and for roofing. He disclosed that during the research, he
also found out that the district had large deposits of clay which could be used
for the production of brick and tiles, roofing products as well as for the
building of houses. He observed that building a house from products made of
these natural rock and clay deposits, automatically regulates temperatures in and
outside of the rooms which could then reduce additional expenditures on
purchasing and installation of electronic cooling devices.
He
said per his evaluation based on the scientific findings analysed, the
District’s clay deposits can last for the next 41 years should an investor
produce say 60,000 bricks a day. He emphasised that no entrepreneur stands to
lose should he/she establish a plant in the area while such an intervention
will also create hundreds of jobs thereby reducing the high poverty numbers.
Meanwhile, Dr. Arhin and his team also identified potentials of phosphate which
he said can be used by companies in the fertilizer industry.
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