Business
FG Proposes Road Sector Bill To Replace FERMA
The Federal Government is proposing a new Road Sector Reform Bill to repeal the Federal Road Maintenance Agency Establishment Act No 7 of 2002 and subsequent amendments.
The Minister of Works, Mr Mike Onolememen, stated this in Abuja recently at the opening of a two-day workshop on the proposed bill.
Onolememen, who said FERMA was merely a stop gap, explained that the bill would herald the birth of the Federal Road Authority (FRA) and National Road Fund (NRF) if the bill scaled through at the National Assembly, the FRA would naturally take charge of road maintenance and ownership.
It would be recalled that the Federal Government had towards the end of 2011, constituted a committee for the Road Sector Reform chaired by Dr Bernard Obika.
The minister said “in 1996, when we had a conference in Abuja and it was decided that African continent should reform the administration of the road sector.
“One of the cardinal recommendations was that a road authority be created that will oversee road development in African countries, just as we have Port Authorities all over the continent.
“But in our usual manner in this country, some interests crept in when we were carrying out our own reform and we just did it half-heartedly and that led to the creation of FERMA.
“With all intent and purpose, FERMA was like a stop-gap,” Onolememen said.
According to the minister, the present administration will through this road reform prove that it had the political will to do what is right.
“Now we have the political will and we want to do what is right,” he stated further.
On the imperative of FRA bill, Onolememen said it would provide for a semi-autonomous road agency that would be responsible for the efficient construction, maintenance and rehabilitation of federal roads.
He said it would also avail the government with the necessary framework.
“The creation of the FRA is in line with international road management practice.
“The organisation provides advice to the minister on road transportation and road infrastructure matters.”
The minister said that Nigeria’s intention of being on the list of the top 20 developed countries by the year 2020 would be a mirage if the infrastructural potentials of the nation were not harnessed, developed and sustained.
Also speaking, the Acting Director-General of Bureau of Public Enterprises, Mr Benjamin Dikki explained that the bill would among other things, improve service delivery in the road sector.