Imo Workers Top On My List Of Priorities, Uzodinma Insists

Imo State Governor, Hope Uzodinma has assured Imo workers that they will always be at the top of the priority list of his administration vowing to whatever was possible to ensure that their welfare was well taken care of. 

Governor Uzodinma gave this assurance when he during the activity marking this year’s Workers’ Day celebration in Owerri, the Imo State capital on Wednesday.

He bemoaned a situation in which certain employees collude with dishonest individuals to weaken the government through the theft of government assets (land, for example), the creation of fictitious invoices that are then used to embezzle public funds, and, most frequently, the establishment of private companies that take their focus away from honestly and completely serving the government.

He reiterated that it was the mess he discovered in the Ministry of Land, for instance, that compelled him to cede the ministry for now to his own office as a way of restoring the needed sanity and trust.

Governor Uzodinma said though overseeing the office of the Ministry of Land will add to his already huge responsibility, he has no choice but to make that sacrifice for Imo State the same way he has denied himself overseas travels for the sake of the state.

Read Also: Uzodinma Calls For Probe Over Billions Spent In Power Sector

He urged the workers to join him in making Imo State the dream state of all by doing the right thing and making the necessary sacrifices. He promised not to take their support for granted, pledging that his administration would continue to place the welfare and interests of the people above every other consideration.

The governor listed some of his welfare packages for Imo workers, including the implementation of the N30,000 minimum wage, prompt payment of salaries, free transportation to and fro work, a free health insurance scheme with complete payment of premiums, palliative measures to cushion the effect of fuel subsidy removal, and an adjustment of the salary to N40,000 for the lower cadre workers, among others.

Governor Uzodimma reminded the workers that his government was among the first to domesticate the increase in the service period of teachers from 60 to 65 years of age and 35 to 40 years of service, and the commencement of payment of gratuities to retired workers.

Africa Today News, New York

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