Home MetroFCTA allocation drops from N59b to N13.5b – Minister

FCTA allocation drops from N59b to N13.5b – Minister

by Godswill Ikemefuna
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THE Federal Capital Territory Administration has stated that its federal allocation in the 2023 fiscal year, has dropped from N59bn awarded in 2022 to N13.5bn.

The Minister, Muhammad Bello, stated this, Thursday, during defence of the N607.9billion 2022 budget, before the National Assembly Joint Committee on FCT.

The Minister in his presentation before the committee said while N59bn was earmarked for the territory from its 1% allocation from the federal budget in 2022 fiscal year, the allocation has been slashed to N13.5bn for the 2023 fiscal year.

He said even from the N59bn allocated for it from the federal government portion of the federation account in the 2022 fiscal year, only N19b had been released so far.

He said, “The FCT budget has two components. One is yearly allocation from 1% of the Federal Government share of the federation account and the second one is internally generated revenue which has over the years been the main sustenance of governmental operations in FCT.

“In the N607.9bn 2022 budget of FCT, the federal allocation is just N59billion out of which only N19bn has been released.

“For the 2023 fiscal year, the projected federal allocation has been drastically slashed to N13.5bn despite the increase in the number of planned projects from 20 in the 2022 fiscal year to 22 in the 2023 fiscal year.”

He explained that out of the proposed N607.9bn 2022 budget, N76.6bn was for personnel cost, N138bn for overhead cost and the remaining balance of N393.2bn for capital projects.

According to him, one of the critical projects the capital votes are to be used on is the Greater Abuja Water Project, planned to provide portable water for 29 additional districts within the territory; rehabilitation and expansion of outer southern expressway; expansion and extension of inner southern expressway; construction of southern parkway from Christian Centre, B6 812; reconstruction and dualisation of lower Usuma Dam-Gurara road; construction of access roads for Abuja Light Rail Stations; resurfacing of existing roads and provision of emergency works in the FCT, among others.

The construction of the 14km Mpape-Shere Galuwyi road, a bold initiative of the administration, is to ensure the successful resettlement of original inhabitants in about 16 communities. The resettlement site covers about 900 hectares of land in Bwari Area Council, to resettle the 16 villages namely: Utako, Maje, Mabushi, Jabi Samuel, Jabi Yakubu, Kpaadna, Zhilu, Gishini, Dakibiyu, Gwarimpa, Galadima, Jahi & II Kado, Bimiko, Kado Kuchi and Lungu presently domiciled within phases II and III of the city.

He said as a result of huge financial demands, the territory was now adopting integration of indigenes into newly opened districts as against the resettlement policy that had been causing crisis over the years.

“System of re-settlement earlier put in place has not worked, making us adopt the policy of integration as presently being done in Kabusa,” he said.

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