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Wike: Public Service Delivery Beyond Political Undertone
One significant attribute of the present administration in the Rivers State is the serial demonstration by Governor Nyesom Wike, that public service delivery shall be driven by extant laws and procedures, and not on the basis of political partisan loyalty and patronage. A most dramatic demonstration of this positive was played out during the interactive session between the State Governor , Chief Nyesom Wike and the complement of sanitation contractors engaged by the Rivers State Waste Management Agency (RIWAMA), to handle the various street cleaning jobs in the state last week, and who were inherited from the previous administration.
Worried by the apparent abdication of their contractual obligations and the attendant spread of filth across the state capital, Port Harcourt, as well as the virtually riotous state of affairs with respect to street trading, the government’s resolve to deal decisively with the situation manifested firstly in the passage of new laws; namely; the ‘Rivers State Environmental Protection and Management Bill’, ‘Rivers State Street Trading, Illegal Markets and Motor Parks (Prohibition) Bill’ and the ‘Rivers State Healthcare Facilities Registration Bill’. Expectedly, these laws will put into perspective, the roles of various stake-holders in the environmental soundness of the state. Not done with that, the Governor in his characteristic resort to moral suasion in promoting the policy targets of his administration, summoned to an interactive session, the respective sanitation contractors whose abdication of their legitimate responsibilities, led to the sorry state of sanitation in the first place.
It was at the forum that Wike let the world know that many of these contractors were not appointed by him but as has been stated earlier, were inherited from the previous administration of Rotimi Amaechi. According to Wike, “I was not the person who awarded the contracts. I don’t even know the contractors. I have not restricted contracts to my supporters. Several of you are from opposition parties.
But we must make sure that all parts of the state capital remain clean”. This homily from the governor should be seen properly as going beyond a mere advisory for erring contractors, but testifies eloquently to a more fundamental, welcome political vision and orientation which holds that administrative obligations of government, should be separated from the murky terrain of whimsical tendencies that often drive partisan politics. The separation of politics from administration has remained accentuated by copious, classical scholarship – right from the earliest days of intellectual enquiry into the circumstances of formal organizational behaviour. Among the numerous definitions of politics, remains the reductionist explanation of it as the complement of activities that border on seeking political power for the purpose of earning capability and legitimacy to serve a constituency, in representative and leadership capacities.
Such a process involves a whole gamut of activities – including the efforts aimed at earning the acceptance of the constituents. It is in the context of seeking the endorsement of constituents that some unscrupulous actors mis-present themselves as well as facts to the public, through making false claims and promises, that have no grounding in reality.
Administration however runs on a different track as it entails the actual implementation of government policies, programmes and projects in line with extant laws and procedures. In fact, it remains plausible to contend that the translation by a government, of political promises to tangible dividends for the governed, through the machinery of effective administrative processes, remains the acid test of any administration throughout the civilised world. And this is the terrain where Wike’s successes in governance lie. With characteristic missionary zeal, he had launched an administrative course of action in his first term, which featured a clear departure from the status quo, and saw him recording landmark progress in programme implementation and projects execution.
Against the backdrop of the foregoing, the respective RIWAMA contractors do not need further sermons to spur them into action pursuant to lifting Port Harcourt back to its hitherto enviable status as the Garden City of the country. Given the elaboration involved in the exercise of redeeming Port Harcourt – that is counting from the due process of enacting relevant laws for maintaining environmental soundness in the state, the interactive session between Wike and the contractors as well as the down to earth administrative machinery already mobilised, the ball is now in the court of the contractors. Needless to point out that as sanitation contractors, they are also partners of the government in spreading the message of a cleaner environment.
With the governor’s revelation that the Rivers State was spending as much as N6 billion annually to evacuate wastes, all Wike is asking for is the delivery of value for money, spent on waste management.