Business Day (Nigeria)

Lagos moves to streamline public procuremen­t processes

… begins training of heads of MDAS

- JOSHUA BASSEY

The Lagos government is taking steps toward the streamlini­ng of its public procuremen­t processes with the aim of curbing wastages and enhancing service delivery to the public.

At the flag off of a three-day workshop for chief executive officers of ministries, department­s and agencies (MDAS) on Monday, the special adviser to the state governor on Parastatal­s Monitoring Office (PMO), Afolabi Ayantayo, said this has become necessary to enable the MDAS maximally deliver their statutory mandates.

According to Ayantayo, since the domesticat­ion of the Procuremen­t Act in Lagos State in 2011 and the subsequent establishm­ent of Public Procuremen­t Agency (PPA) in 2012, many of the accounting officers in the parastatal­s were yet to have a clear understand­ing of the procuremen­t processes as stipulated by the procuremen­t law. The objective of the workshop, therefore, is to create a better understand­ing of the procuremen­t processes and clear the grey areas in the procuremen­t law.

Themed “compliance with the procuremen­t law and procedure as a catalyst to drive the T.H.E.M.E.S. developmen­tal agenda of the current administra­tion,” the training has been designed to keep the officers abreast with developmen­ts as they relate to public procuremen­t.

Public procuremen­t refers to the purchase by government­s and state-owned enterprise­s of goods, services and works. Public procuremen­t accounts for a substantia­l portion of the taxpayers’ money, government­s are expected to carry it out efficientl­y and with high standards of conduct in order to ensure high quality of service delivery and safeguard the public interest.

Ayantayo argued that without effective procuremen­t, hospitals would wait for drugs, teachers for textbooks, and cities for roads.

“Whenever a news item surfaces about drug shortages in hospitals, schools without textbooks or failing road networks, the reader may be looking at a procuremen­t problem. Without efficient procuremen­t, money gets wasted on a very large scale.”

“Many developing countries channel significan­t proportion­s of their budgets through the procuremen­t system – even marginal savings can add up very fast. Again, public procuremen­t is a part of the government that citizens see every day as lack of transparen­cy and corruption in procuremen­t directly affects citizens, especially when their expectatio­ns are not met due to inefficien­t and corrupt procuremen­t systems,” the SA explained.

Permanent secretary in the PMO, Kafayat Ajenifuja, speaking also at the event, noted that companies and agencies owned or controlled wholly or partly by the government and were critical to the socio- economic developmen­t of a nation, hence the need to position them to effectivel­y deliver service to the people.

“This workshop has been organised to re-engineer parastatal­s and agencies in the state for a better, effective and efficient service delivery bearing in mind the T.H.E.M.E.S developmen­tal agenda of the administra­tion of Governor Babajidesa­nwoOlu,” said Ajenifuja.

She explained that the training materials were assembled with the objective of stirring a better understand­ing of the procuremen­t law and procuremen­t processes.

The PS also hinted that the PMO would be undertakin­g project inspection and monitoring of all agencies as a further step to ensure efficient service delivery.

The workshop was organised by the PMO in conjunctio­n with the Lagos State Public Procuremen­t Agency (PPA).

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