Gov. Oyebanji
Protocols
Mr. Speaker, it is a great honour and privilege to deliver my second State of the State address at this hallowed chamber of Ekiti State House of Assembly.
This tradition of delivering a State of the State Address, which represents an essential pillar of democracy and a shining example of accountability, continues with today’s address. As your Governor, I come here with a great sense of reverence for this honourable House and the good people of Ekiti State, recognizing the great honour that has been bestowed upon me to occupy this office, signifying the trust of the people, not just in me, but in our great party, the All Progressives Congress (APC). I do not take this honour for granted.
I will continue to thank His Excellency, Dr. Kayode Fayemi who enshrined this democratic practice of accountability in our governance culture in Ekiti. To date, our State remains the only state in Nigeria that has enshrined the State of the State Address as a legal requirement for stewardship. We must remain proud of this distinction.
I stand before you today with a heart filled with gratitude, humility, and a profound sense of duty as I address the great people of Ekiti State on a significant occasion that marks yet another anniversary in office— our second. I want to sincerely extend my deepest appreciation to the Almighty God for His faithfulness and abiding grace over us and to all the good people of Ekiti State who have continued to keep faith with us, supporting our vision, policies and programmes with great fervour. Your devotion to the progress of Ekiti State is commendable!
Before I go further into this address, let me sincerely thank this House and its leadership for the strong cooperation in the service of our people. Your support has been a major factor behind our successes. Together, with the good people of Ekiti, you have been the drivers of our administration’s bold march forward.
We will always be grateful to the fathers of this great state whose leadership in times past laid a solid foundation upon which we are now building. I therefore want to thank my immediate predecessor Dr Kayode Fayemi, CON for his continued support. I also acknowledge the support of former Governors, H.E. Otunba Adeniyi Adebayo, CON; H.E. Ayodele Fayose; and H.E. Engr. Segun Oni. I also appreciate all our traditional leaders, Leaders of Thought, religious leaders, as well as party leaders and members across all levels for their sacrifices and support.
My profound gratitude to the President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR for his very strong support for our administration. Mr. President has been a strong pillar of support for our government. Most of our achievements would have been impossible without his support and encouragement. I am also grateful to the Ekiti Caucus in the National Assembly under the leadership of the Senate Leader Senator Michael Opeyemi Bamidele (MOB), Aare Afe Babalola, SAN and the Honourable Minister of Solid Minerals Development; Mr Dele Alake for their support and cooperation.
Pillars of Administration
In keeping with our social contract with Ekiti people, we designed the “Six Pillars”, a classification of our governing agenda built from our campaign pledges, we have continued to steer Ekiti towards a more inclusive and prosperous state. Rooted in these pillars are the Ekiti Development Plan 2021-2050, which highlights the development projection of our State in the next 30 years, and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Our achievements under these Six Pillars, which include: 1. Governance, 2. Youth Development and Job Creation, 3. Human Capital Development, 4. Agriculture and Rural Development, 5. Infrastructure and Industrialisation and 6. Arts, Culture, and Tourism, will form the thrust of my presentation here today.
Governance: Law and Order
Mr. Speaker, the first duty of the government is to maintain law and order, ensuring the protection of life and property. With full appreciation of this cardinal responsibility, we have continued to make substantial investments in the security architecture of our State. To this end, we have ramped up acquisitions of security assets to further bolster our arsenal following earlier massive acquisitions. Specifically, we have effected the following: commencement of full operations at Ikere, Ijero, Ikole and Omuo Fire Service Stations; procurement of Vehicles for WNSN, aka Amotekun Corps; upward review of Amotekun Corps salary (Effective from July 2023), and the deployment of additional troops from Nigerian Army 32 Artillery Brigade. In the course of the year under review, and in response to the request of our traditional rulers, we recently established the Agro-Marshals Corps as a grassroots security system to further man our forests and places kidnappers often use as their operational bases. We have also expanded the capabilities of the Early Warning System to drive our Safe City programme.
Our bottom-up security and intelligence system, which entails strengthening local intelligence and community involvement in security, has continued to expand and advance. Our close coordination with chairmen of the Local Government Areas and Local Council Development Areas continues to yield dividends with more successes in intelligence gathering, crime prevention, arrests and prosecution of criminals. This is a strategy that will continue to receive priority attention in this administration.
I must sincerely thank the security agencies, namely: the Police, the Directorate of State Security (DSS), the Army, Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, Amotekun, and the plethora of community-based security outfits, for their contribution to this success story. We are, however, aware that security is an ongoing concern and must receive the highest focus at all times. Thus, we will continue to work with our security partners to ensure that no gaps are allowed, and continuous improvement is entrenched.
Governance derives its force from law, and its compass from sound policies. Mr Speaker, I would like to thank the leadership and Honourable Members of the Ekiti State House of Assembly for being worthy and reliable partners in this regard. Your forward-thinking lawmaking provides a firm foundation upon which our governance rests. Some of the notable laws and policies that have come into force include:
i.Ekiti State Local Content Law
ii.Ekiti State Bureau of Asset Management Law
iii.Ekiti State Environmental Protection and Watershed Management Agency Law
iv.Ekiti State Regulation Approval Law
v.Ekiti State House of Assembly Power and Privileges Law
vi.Ekiti State High Court Amendment Law
vii.Ekiti State Property Protection Amendment Law
viii.Executive Order on the Promotion of Transparency and Efficiency in the Business Environment
These legal instruments are evidence of our progressive relationship. We are determined to continue, with your support, assenting to, and implementing laws and policies for the development of our dear state and the betterment of the lives of our people. We are confident that the coming months and years would witness even greater collaboration in this area.
Investment promotion
To achieve our inclusive and sustainable development goals, we must attract investments to Ekiti. Therefore, we have strategically combined legal instruments, policies, reforms, and targeted social and physical infrastructure interventions to position our State as a prime destination for investments. Our milestones are as follows:
Administration
To improve service delivery to our people, we understand that the administrative process needs to be continuously upgraded. This, we have committed to doing. We have undertaken the following additional activities:
Fully appreciating the value of qualified personnel and their contribution to optimum service delivery, we have also undertaken the recruitment of workers to fill some important vacancies across the MDAs in the state. Some of the new recruitments include:
To upskill our personnel and ensure sustained readiness for the job, we have continued to prioritize training and retraining. Our capacity development efforts, which have been largely driven by the Ekiti State Staff Development Centre, have seen us conduct:
To ensure sustained optimum output across MDAs, we have initiated Strategic Project Monitoring Systems (SPMS), a dashboard to track MDAs’ deliverables.
For us, the welfare of all our workers is paramount. To this end, we have made additional improvements to the welfare of our workers, consistent with our earlier pledges and accomplishments. The list of welfare initiatives, include:
Ekiti economy
Despite the macroeconomic headwinds in the country, the multi-sectoral outlook for the Ekiti state economy continues to be positive. This has been driven by our fiscal reforms, budget performance, aggressive revenue-generation push, and strategic investments in human and physical infrastructure. Building on the successes of our 2023 Budget which saw us accomplish the following:
I am pleased to inform you that due to our fidelity to fiscal transparency and accountability:
Our sacred duty is to ensure that none of our people is left behind. We will continue to prioritize inclusion for both our people and localities, ensuring that development is spread all round. Our broad vision is to have an economy that is productive, in line with our vision of shared prosperity. We will continue to invest in critical productivity drivers, while ensuring economic activity is private sector-led, by attracting new businesses to Ekiti, while also focusing on supporting existing ones to grow.
We are aware of our need to diversify our economy and create an environment that puts people in jobs. This is reflected in our priorities, with investments in human capital development, agriculture and infrastructure taking a significant share of our expenditure.
Human capital development: Education
As we all know, Ekiti is famed for being the home of education in Nigeria. We are a learned people committed to keeping the light of enlightenment blazing. As a government, we are well aware of our responsibility to, not only preserve this legacy, but ensure that our education is in tune with advancements in technology, innovation and the knowledge economy. To this end, we have embarked on some of the most far-reaching and impactful programmes in education to date. Some of these interventions include:
These massive interventions are in addition to earlier efforts geared towards improving education in the state. These include:
Basic Education Board
The above interventions have led to a massive improvement in students’ enrolment, performance, teaching, learning outcomes in the sector and a drastic reduction in out of school children in the State. It is on record that Ekiti has one of the least out of school children in Nigeria.
Special attention was also given to the Special Schools and these are:
Digital Skill and Youth Employment
Our investments in the acquisition of digital skills by our youth has been consistent and substantial. We believe that to become a global player either as entrepreneurs or employees, requires the acquisition of relevant skills. We have continued to build on significant accomplishments in this area to expand access to sustainable opportunities for our young people. Recall that we had announced the delivery of the following, among others:
MSMEs Development
Health & Human Services
In the health sector we have embarked on a transformative journey towards universal health coverage, marked by significant advancements in leadership and governance, service delivery, workforce and capacity building, health promotion and disease prevention, health financing, and healthcare infrastructure. The Ministry of Health has implemented robust governance frameworks to enhance accountability and strategic alignment within the health sector.
To drive our health interventions, we developed a multi-year annual operational plan (2024-2026) to ensure better planning for capital projects that span more than a financial year, and prioritization of projects geared towards universal health coverage.
Across the three levels of care, we have embarked on an extensive upgrade of our infrastructure. These include;
Beyond infrastructure, we have instituted a series of capacity-building, professional development and training initiatives to enhance the skills and capabilities of healthcare professionals and service providers. These workforce capacity developments include:
With the perennial concerns about disease outbreaks, the state continues to remain on high alert. The use of rapid response teams spread across all wards in the state, and our decentralisation of incident management structures to the 16 local government areas, enable us pick up on early warning signals, and allow us respond appropriately. This work may appear thankless, but the efforts of our health team have helped curtail potential epidemics and limited our exposure to any disease outbreak this year to the barest minimum.
I am happy to inform you that these investments are yielding measurable outputs and outcomes. This year alone,
Last year, I announced that under our flagship health insurance program (Ulerawa), we provide an explicit but guaranteed package of care, which includes free delivery across our 177 primary health centres. This year alone, over 4,000 babies born were delivered free of charge, and more than 400,000 persons have accessed free care, at our primary health care facilities courtesy of Ulerawa. I am happy to inform you that this year also, we have now extended coverage of services under Ulerawa to all 3.6million residents of Ekiti including pensioners. As at today, over 9,000 pensioners have enrolled in the program.
Social Welfare
Ekiti has not been exempted from the cost-of-living crisis which has proven a huge burden for Nigerians across the country. Determined to provide relief to our people, our Cash Transfer Unit (SCTU) and Labour-Intensive Public Works (LIPW) intervention channels have continued to be sources of succour to our people. Our people have continued to receive needed support on a regular basis.
We enrolled 154,003 households including 581,503 individuals on the National Social Register (NSR). This provides a pool of vulnerable individuals that we can extract beneficiaries from for our different social schemes
We undertook the disbursement of N1.04 billion at N25,000 each to 24,780 National Social Register (NSR) beneficiaries and 16,876 Rapid Response Register (RRR) beneficiaries under the National Cash Transfer scheme.
We disbursed a total of N181.8m between October 2023 to July 2024 to 1326 individual beneficiaries under the Labour-Intensive Public Works (LIPW) Scheme. We also disbursed N174.8m to another set of 2000 beneficiaries under the LIPW scheme between March 2024-September 2024. The combined total under the LIPW scheme is N356.6m
Our senior citizens continue to occupy a special place in our welfare plans. Through our social investment schemes, we are addressing the needs of our vulnerable senior citizens by providing regular monetary support. Apart from our regular interventions, we distributed gifts to our senior citizens on the International Day of
Older Persons
We disbursed a total of N250m at the rate of N25,000 to 10,000 individuals at 5,000 per month for 5 months between October 2023 and February 2024 under the fuel subsidy withdrawal palliative scheme.
Following unfortunate fire disasters, we disbursed N41.3 million to victims in Ekiti state
We disbursed a total of N300m under the EKCARES Social Transfer scheme to 5000 (1751 male, 3249 females) beneficiaries. The beneficiaries are a mix of aged, people living with disabilities, chronically ill and urban poor in our State
We have disbursed N320m to 2000 (627 male, 1373 female) beneficiaries and N185.4m to 1,159 (322 male, 837 female) beneficiaries making a total of N505.4m under the EK CARES Livelihood Support Grant scheme to household businesses
N89.4M was also awarded as livelihood grants to 559 beneficiaries through the Payment Service Provider (PSP) channel
We released N331m for purchase and distribution of items to indigent persons across the state.
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