Lagos council polls: LASIEC ad-hoc staff protest non-payment of allowance

The Lagos Independent Electoral Commission (LASIEC) ad-hoc staff at the last local government polls have cried out over non-payment of their allowances one month after the election was held.

The Lagos Independent Electoral Commission (LASIEC) ad-hoc staff at the last local government polls have cried out over non-payment of their allowances one month after the election was held.

Some of the affected ad-hoc staff told journalists in Lagos on Wednesday that LASIEC was yet to pay for services rendered for the July 24 elections into 20 LGAs and 37 LCDAs in the state.

One of the ad-hoc staff who worked as Presiding Officer in Kosofe area, Segun Komolafe, told journalists that LASIEC had not paid him one month after the poll.

Mr Komolafe said that LASIEC kept telling them to be patient, adding that they were running out of patience after one month of waiting in vain for the commission.

“Patient till when, how much are they paying us that we have to wait till eternity?” he asked.

Another presiding officer, who requested not to be named, said they were tired of waiting for the money they had worked for.

“When will our waiting come to an end? If nothing is done this week, we may have to besiege the commission’s office with protests if that is what they want,” she said.

Reacting, the Spokesperson for the commission, Tope Ojo, said about 90 per cent of the ad-hoc staff had been paid.

Mr Ojo explained that the payment was being done in batches, from one local government to another.

“We have paid 90 per cent of the ad-hoc staff, those who have not been paid may be having discrepancies in their account details which is being sorted out, I can assure you that all will be paid between now and next week.

“Then, there are people who registered on our website and did not work at the end of the day. We need to sought all these out so we don’t pay the wrong persons.

“These are the reasons for the delay in some of the LGs that have not been paid,” he said.

Also, the Chairman, Lagos State House of Assembly Committee on LASIEC, Victor Akande, when contacted, urged those who had not been paid to be patient with the commission as the matter was being handled.

Total
0
Shares
Related Posts
Read More

Investing in Women-Led Enterprises Is a Growth Strategy Nigeria Can’t Afford to Delay

Across African banking, the conversation is shifting from "inclusion as intent" to "inclusion as performance." Margin pressure, recapitalisation conversations, digitisation, and tighter risk expectations are forcing a hard question: where will sustainable, low-volatility growth come from in the next cycle? One answer is hiding in plain sight: women-led enterprises, underfunded, underserved, and consistently productive. 
Read More

Tinubu’s silent and unreported achievements -By Tunde Rahman

But for the ministerial presentations on the achievements of the President Bola Tinubu administration in its first year, christened Ministerial Sectoral Update, which began on Tuesday May 21 at the National Press Centre in Abuja, many may not have known or appreciated the quantum of work that has been done by the government within such a short period of one year in office. This piece is not really about the re-engineering work that is being done on the economy, which is now recording a gradual growth. For instance, according to the National Bureau of Statistics, the nation recorded a 2.98% growth in the first quarter of this year, higher than 2.31% recorded in the same period in 2023.