LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN NIGERIA
LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN NIGERIA
INTRODUCTION
The problem of governance particularly at the local level has
been a recurring decimal in the political history of Nigeria. Local government
in Nigeria started during the colonial era when it was vested in traditional
rulers and it operated in a very undemocratic manner. Over the years, efforts
have been made to democratize local government and make it more responsive to
developmental needs. The problems of local government in Nigeria have been documented
and they include among other things, inadequate planning, poor implementation
of policies, inadequate revenue, corruption and mismanagement, lack of
adequately skilled manpower, lack of autonomy, lack of participation by the people
and intergovernmental conflict.
The history of local government system in Nigeria dates back to
the colonial days. Although contact with Europeans dates back to the fifteenth
century, it was not until 1861 before the first steps were taken to establish
an administration by Britain. The colonial administration that was established
was based on indirect rule. This requires that the administration should be
carried out through traditional rulers and institutions. This led to the
establishment of native authorities in their most rudimentary forms from the
1890s to the 1930s. The main function of the native authorities was to maintain
law and order.
The first native authority ordinance recognized traditional rulers
as native authorities. This was easily done in Northern Nigeria but there was a
problem in identifying who those authorities were in Southern Nigeria. This
necessitated the first reforms in the 1930s and the 1940s culminating in the
establishment of chiefs-in-council and chiefs-and-council in place of sole
native authorities. The Chief-in-Council is made up of the chief and members of
council. The chief presides at all meetings and acts in accordance with the
majority of opinion in the council. But if he disagrees with the council, he
would take whatever action he thought best and inform the Governor of the
region. Contrarily, in the Chief-and-Council, the chief has no power to act
against the decision or advice of the council. Under this arrangement, people
particularly representatives of missionaries and British trading interest were
appointed into the native authorities. The process of appointment of nominated
members by the colonial government meant that nationalists were not appointed
to serve on the councils. This led to further agitation for reforms in the
native authorities.
In the years 1950-55, the first largely elected local government
council based on the British Whitehall model emerged in Lagos and the former
Eastern and Western regions. Traditional rulers constituted not more than 25
percent of most councils in the then Western region and Lagos. However, in
Northern Nigeria, the changes were more gradual. The legal framework for local
government at this period was provided by the Eastern region local government
ordinance of 1950, the Western region local government law of 1952 and the 1954
Native Authority law in Northern Nigeria. By this time, the councils were given
a wider range of functions including primary education, health, police,
judiciary e.t.c. This is in line with the implementation of the colonial
government’s ten-year welfare and development plan (1946-1956). The councils
also enjoyed a great measure of autonomy in financial, personnel and general
administrative matters. It can therefore be said that the 1950s was the era of
pupilage for councils in modern local government throughout Nigeria.
Between 1960-1966, there was a decline in the prestige and
responsibilities of local authorities. In the former Western region, the local
government (Amendment) law 1960 abolished the powers of councils to levy
education and general rates on the basis of need. In Lagos, there was a high
rate of default in the payment of property rates including government
institutions, which reduced the revenue of the local councils. The situation in
Eastern Nigeria was similar to the West before the outbreak of the civil war in
1967. In Northern Nigeria, there were gradual changes in the structure of the
councils with increasing numbers of elected or appointed non-traditional office
holders becoming members of local authorities. The result was that the local
authorities had a stable administration, which enabled them to assume
responsibility, with some degree of success for more complex services like
primary education. Between 1969/71, some state government introduced some
changes in the structure of their councils.
In 1976, the Federal Government in collaboration with the state
government embarked on extensive reforms of local government. The objectives of
the reform were outlined as follows:
§ To make appropriate
services and development activities responsive to local wishes and initiatives
by devolving or delegating them to local representative bodies.
§ To facilitate the
exercise of democratic self-government close to the grass roots of our society and
to encourage initiative and leadership potential.
§ Mobilisation of
human material resources through the involvement of members of the public in
their local development, and
§ To provide a
two-way channel of communication between local communities and government (both
State and Federal)
For the first time in the history of local government in Nigeria,
a uniform system was developed for the whole country. According to the then
Chief of staff Brigadier Shehu M. Yar Adu’a in his forward to the Guidelines
for Local Government Reform (1976):
In embarking on these reforms, the Federal
Military Government was essentially motivated by the necessity to stabilize and
rationalize Government at the local level. This must of necessity entail the decentralization
of some significant functions of state governments to local levels in order to
harness local resources for rapid development.
Unlike previous reform measures, which were highly restricted in
scope and range, the 1976 reforms conceptualized local government as the third
tier of government operating within a common institutional framework with
defined functions and responsibilities. As the third tier of government, the
local government gets statutory grants from Federal and state governments, and
is expected to serve as agent of development especially in rural areas.
The intentions of the 1976 reform were debated by the constitution
drafting Committee and the Constituent assembly in 1978. The result is that the
1979 constitution reaffirmed the development function as provided for in
section 7, subsection 3.
It shall be the duty of a local government council within the
State to participate in economic planning and development of the area referred
to in subsection (2) of this section and to this end an economic planning board
shall be established by a law enacted by the House of assembly of the State.
In addition, section seven of the 1979 Constitution provided for a
democratically elected local government councils for the country.
Unfortunately, during the Alhaji Shehu Shagari regime (1979-1983), the
constitutional provisions were neglected. No elections were held and sole
administrators were appointed. The Mohammadu Buhari regime (1983-1984)
continued with the system of sole administrators. During Babangida regime
(1984-1992) there were certain reforms aimed at ensuring local government
autonomy. These included the abolition of the Ministry of Local Government;
establishment of executive and legislative arms in local councils; and direct
allocation to local government without passing through State government. The
regime also increased local government statutory allocation from 15 percent to
20 percent with effect from 1992. It is important to point out that the
intergovernmental relations between the Federal, state and local government has
been characterized by both co-operation and conflict; but it is
conflict that has predominated State-local Government relations.
The military has played a dominant role in the history,
politics and constitutional development of Nigeria. There is hardly any
analysis on any socio-economic, historical and political issue in Nigeria that
can be done without looking at the impact of the military. Out of the 56 years
of post independence Nigeria, the military ruled the country for 29 years. The
military no doubt is a major force in determining and shaping socio-political
relations.
MEANING OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT
Many scholars define local government differently. This
is as a result of varied perspectives on the actual role of local government which
differ from one environment
to another. However, local government
can be defined as
government at the
local level exercised
through representative
councils established by
law to exercise
specific powers within defined
areas ( Local Government Reform Handbook,1992). According to Oni, (1993), local
government is that “level of
government exercised through representative councils,
established by law to
exercise geographical area
with common social
and political ties”. These
powers should give
the council substantial
control over loc al affairs as
well as the st
aff, and
institutional and financial
powers to initiate and
direct the provision
of services and
to determine and implement projects so as to
complement the activities of the state and federal governments in their
areas. Local government syst em can be defined as: Government at
local level exercise
through representative
councils established by law to exercise
specific powers within
defined area. These powers should give the council substantial control over
local affairs as
well as the
staff and institutional and
financial powers to
initiate and direct the
provision of services and
to determine and implement
projects so as
to ensure through devolution of
functions to these
councils and through the
active participation, of
the people and their
traditional institutions that
local initiative and response
to local needs
and conditions are maximize d. (Awa, 2006:96)
These definitions are rooted in the meaning of local government by the
United Nations, office
for Public Administration which
defines local government as: A
political division of a nation or (in federal system), state, which is
constituted by law and has subst antial control of local affairs, including the
powers to impose taxes or to exact labour for prescribed purpose(UN Report ,
1960:3). The governing body of such an
entry is elected or otherwise locally selected. (Quoted in Ola, 1984:7). The
common denominator in these definitions is that local government is that
local government is
a subordinate system
of government and has
the authority to undertake
public activities. (Eneanya,
2012:15). This authority has
structures and functions,
collects revenue,
experiences some challenges
and is controlled
by central authority. These definitions are
encompassing and most
widely accepted and have
theoretical implications. From the
definitions, certain
characteristics of local government stand out.
CHARACTERISICS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT Almost all local
government bodies share certain characteristics:
• That local
government is a subordinate system of government;
·
A continuing organization;
·
The authority to undertake public
activities;
·
The ability to enter into contracts;
·
The right to sue and be sued; and
·
The ability to collect taxes; and
·
Has the power
to make policies,
prepare budgets and
have a measure of control over
its own staff.
REASONS
FOR ESTABLISHING LOCAL GOVERNMENT
The following
are the reasons
for establishing local government (Eneanya,2012: 19-20):
Local government
provides the platform
for people to
conduct their own affairs
in line with
local needs aspirations,
resource s and customs which
they alone understand
better than any outside;
Provides
framework for mobilizing
and sustaining popular
zeal and initiative in development;
Serves as a
hedge against over-concentration of
power at the centre which often leads to tyranny;
It acts as a two-way channel of communication between the
local population and the central government.
It aggregates local interest and transmits these to the centre and also keeps
the local population
informed about central government policies and programmes;
Local government serves as socio-economic laboratory for testing new
proposals for government
organization and sound
economic policies; and Acts
as training ground
for leadership positions
at the national level.
The history of local government in
Nigeria shows that there are problems of governance issues. Over the years,
efforts have been made to reform the local government system and
increase the participation of the people. Despite these reforms, there are
problems with the local government system. However, these problems are not
unique to the local government. They are also prevalent at the State and
Federal levels. The present effort to single out the local government for
reform with pre-determined terms of reference smacks of military hangover and
may actually lead to democratic reversal in local governance. In order to
consolidate the gains made in local governance over the years and reposition
local government for greater performance, there is the need to reform local
government along certain lines. First, local government as a third tier of
government should not be scrapped or changed to local administration. Rather,
it should be strengthened and democratized. Officials of the local government
should always be elected and not appointed. Second, there is the need to put
mechanism in place to promote transparency and accountability at all level of
governance. In this regard, it will, be crucial to strengthen institutions of
horizontal accountability and anti-corruption bodies. In addition, civil
society organizations particularly at the local level should be reoriented and
empowered to hold elected officials accountable. Moreover, there is a great
need to reform the structure of government at all levels (Federal, State and
local government). All these will require a comprehensive review of the 1999
Constitution. The Executive and legislature should display the political will
and commitment to reform the 1999 Constitution that has been criticized by all
strands of society. The reform of the constitution will address other issues
that are germane to good governance such as party financing, campaign financing
and proper electoral system to mention but a few. Finally, government should
place premium on the participation of the people in all governance and
development issues. If all these recommendations are implemented, not only the
local government system but also other tiers of government will be in a better
footing to deliver what Nigerians have termed dividends of democracy.
ORIGIN, REFORMS
AND SYSTEMS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT
Local government system exists in every country with variations in
its structures and functions. Some
countries operate single-tier system, where one local
government exercises all the
powers and performs
all the functions, and multi-tier structural
framework, where two or more local governments
share responsibilities for
providing a range
of services to the
citizens in a
defined area.
HISTORICAL
DEVELOPMENT OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT
Nigeria has experimented
with different systems
of local government since the amalgamation of
the northern and
southern parts of the
country in 1914.
The genesis of
local government administration in Nigeria
dates back to
pre-colonial period. There were
the existence of emirate systems of
Sokoto and Borno
caliphates: Ibadan, Egba,
Ekiti and Oyo empires.
In these kingdoms,
Emirs, Obas and
Chiefs held sway over
the governance of
their respective domains.
Moreover, in these areas, there were smaller districts, villages and wards that
were subject to the
kingdom and emirate
government. These smaller
or subordinate levels of
government could be
seen or described as
local government . Then was the emergence of indirect rule system of British colonialism.
The system of
indirect rule system
later degenerated into
direct rule because “the
traditional rulers became
mere local agents
of colonial officers. The Emirs in the North,
the Obas in
the West and
Warrant chiefs in the
East became sole
native authorities in
their domains”(Ugwu, 2000:8).
Consequently, there
was a reform
in 1930s which
regularized the position of
the Emirs as
the Sole Native
Authorities and consolidated
emirate hegemony in the Northern
heartlands. Similar developments
occurred in the West and to
some extent in the East.
The pattern differed from one district to another.
NATIVE
ADMINISTRATION
The structural arrangement
of Native Administration in
the Northern Region and other parts
of Nigeria, had
the head of
administration as the Governor
General. The Governor
General was responsible
for directing the overall policies of the territory, including matters
relating to the Native Administration. The
Lieutenant Governors were
in charge of
Southern and Northern Administration with headquarters at
Lagos and Kaduna. Among other things they
were in
charge of producing
the annual budget
of their areas which are
incorporated into the Central budget(Ugwu,2000).
The Provincial administration was
extended to every
part of the country. Prior
to this period,
it operated only
in the North.
The number of provinces in
the South increased from three to
nine. They included: Abeokuta,
Benin, Oyo, Warri, Calabar, Ogoja, Ondo, Onitsha and Owerri.
Each province was
under the leadership
of a Resident, was responsible for the overall
performance of the public services in
his jurisdiction. The
Resident was responsible
to the appropriate Lieutenant-Governor(Ugwu, 2000).
Under Sir Governor Bernard Bourdillion (1939-1943),
Southern Nigeria was divided into Eastern
and Western groups
of provinces. He
used River Niger as
the determining boundary. From
1939 onwards, there existed three
groups of provinces
– Northern, Eastern
and Western, with each
under a Lieutenant Governor
with headquarters at Kaduna, Enugu and Ibadan, respectively. Each province
had Divisional Administration with
District Officers (D.Os) as
heads. The District
Officers and Assistant
District Officers were the
officials centrally concerned
with the execution
and implementation of government
policies and to
a less extent,
the formulation of policies at this level.
Below this structure
were the separate units of Native
administration of varying sizes
and types. The
native administration was
operated through the system
of indirect rule.
The colonial government recognized and
strengthened the role of traditional
rulers and chiefs and
through the maintenance
of law and
order, revenue collection, provision of
services, political administration were
affected (Ugwu, 2000).
The Native Administration under
the indirect rule system was successful in the Northern region,
partially successful in the West, but failed in the East. The failure in the East was due to the
decentralized nature of the
Igbo traditional political
system. Besides, the
Aba Women Riot of 1929, as
of inadequacy of
the indirect rule
system resulted in the adoption of the “Best Man Policy”. Under this system, Warrant Chiefs no longer
represented the people in the council rather the people now elected their own
representatives into the native courts and local councils (Ugwu, 2000) . Thus, the
Native Administration gave
way for
representative local authorities
the Southern part
of Nigeria, while it
persisted in the North, until
the first military
intervention of 1966.
GROWTH
OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT
The Native Administration system
continued to thrive
in the North until the
emergence of modern
local system from 1952-1965, and the era of Caretaker Committees and
Sole Administrator Systems. However, since 1970, the number of local
government rose from 299 in 1970 to 301 in 1979, to 781 in 1981, when
the state government were given authority to create local
government. After the
overthrow of the
civilian government in 1984, the numbers were again
reduced to 301 and later they increased to 449 in 1987; 589 in 1991 and
774 in 1996.
LOCAL
GOVERNMENT REFORMS IN NIGERIA
The reforms in local
government Administration in
Nigeria was instigated by criticisms of
educated elites who felt
marginalized in the indirect rule
system. The reforms were mostly notable
in the
Eastern and Western parts of Nigeria.
LOCAL
GOVERNMENT REFORMS BEFORE 1966
Before the 1950s, the colonial government used
Indirect Rule through the Native
Authorities (NA) to
administer the grassroots.
The NA operated under
the District Officer
(DO) with the
cooperation of Traditional
Rulers. The 1950s witnessed “some
notable reforms in the local
government administration mostly in
the Southern part
of Nigeria” (Ugwu, 2003: 14).
Their
administrative procedures were
as follows:
• Funds were raised
mainly through taxation collected by the
NAs, which retained a part for the maintenance of their services.
• Budget 'was
prepared under the guidance
of the District Officer (DO) and
approved by government.
• Southern Nigeria
mounted stiff opposition against
the system in early 1950s
with the government
of Eastern Region,
abolishing native administration and
replacing it with
the Local Council Ordinance of 1950. The Western Region
followed
with the Local
Council Law of 1952, while the Northern Region passed a corresponding law in
1954. In the East, the structure
was patterned after
the British system
of local government.
It was a three-tier structure, as follows:
(i) County (Divisional
council)
(ii) District
council
(iii) Local
council
The reform made
a provision that
all members of
the council were to
be elected by
the people. Due
to inadequate administration and
lack of experience,
to operate this
new system, the local
government was restructured
into a two
tier structure: (a) Urban and County Council and ; (b) Local Councils, which
replaced the three-tier system (Ugwu, 2000). In the Western region, the activities of the traditional rulers gave impetus to
the 1952 Western
Regional Local Government
Law. The law made
provision for a
three-tier structure as
follows: (a) Divisional office;
(b) District Council; and (c) Local
Council. This was also
patterned along the
British system with
its functions including ambulance
services, maternity centres
and hospitals, agriculture, veterinary
and forestry services, primary and
post-primary education (Ugwu,
2000). Agreement was entered between
the educated elites
and traditional rulers
for the latter
to be allocated twenty-five
percent of the membership of the council. In
the Northern Region,
the Native Administration system survived and
remained strong until
the collapse of
the First Republic in 1966.
• Local Council
Service Boards were
created in Southern
parts of Nigeria in 1955 to
regulate the powers of the local authorities on appointment of
employees. In the North,
appointments were on the approval of the appropriate regional
minister of government.
• In 1960, the laws
were amended in line with regional experiences and dictates of
the time. Ministry of
Local Council was
later created to strengthen inspection of finance and personnel.
LOCAL
GOVERNMENT REFORMS DURING MILITARY RULE
When the military
struck in 1966,
local administration system
was abolished via Decree
34. The native court
system became part
of the judiciary, while
the local council
police was dissolved
and integrated into the
federal police force. Native Authority
Prisons were also taken over by
Federal' Prisons. The autonomy and power of the councils were further eroded.
Under the military, the reforms in the North resulted to:
(a) Increased scope
of local participation
(b) Creation of
new administrative units and
structures to facilitate more
participation and effective mobilization
and management of resources for development purposes.
However, the local government structures differed from one
state to the other in the
North. For instance,
Kwara and Benue-Plateau
states established the local
administrat ion system comprising
the local authorities with
Districts councils as
subordinate units. The
other states in the
North such as
North-Central, North Eastern,
North Western and Kano
adopted a three-tier
structure made up
of the following :
(a) The local
Authority
(b) The Administrative Area Council/ Area Development Board
(c) The District Council.
The structures were similar to the three-tier structures adopted
in the Southern part of
the Nigeria in
1950s. Moreover, Township
Administration also existed in areas such as: New Bussa and Bacita in Kwara, Borno
in North-Eastern, Zaria in the North
Central and Kano Township which had a metropolitan
planning Development Board. In the East
Central States, a
new pattern of
local government
Administration was established.
It was known
as the “Development Administration” system. It
also existed in the South Eastern and
Mid-Western states (Ugwu, 2000).
The philosophy of
the system is anchored on community self-help. However,
the reorganization of the system
was affected by
the Divisional Administration Edict
of 1971.
This system introduced
a two-tier structure
of Divisional and Community
Councils. At the
divisional levels, the
local authority in relation
to a community
council area, was
the Divisional officer-in-council of
the Divisional council and
in relation to
an Urban council area, the
Redsident-in-council of the
Urban council. The
system also established an administrative and
coordinating relation between
the state government and
community council on
one hand and
bet ween the state government and the ordinary citizen on the
other. The aim of this was to bring the
government nearer to the people and
reduce the barrier between the people and their environment (Ugwu,
2000). In the West, the Council
Manager system was adopted. The idea was borrowed from
North America. It
was aimed at
integrating some private sector
techniques into public
sector management. The structure of Council Manager System
was made up of a council elected or
appointed members which play the
role of a
board of directors in
a business organization and
secretary who performed
the function of a
chief executive in a company. Each council had a standing committee
responsible for formulating
policies, preparing and
receiving annual council budgets,
and offering support
to the secretary
who served as the
chief executive officer.
The chairman of
the standing committee was
also the chairman
of the council,
and was selected
on annual basis by
the members of the council
from among themselves (Ugwu, 2000).
With the creation of 12 States in 1967, the Eastern and
Mid-West state governments took
over the running
of local political
institutions. The West adopted a
North American model of council manager system and in most of
the Northern States, popular
representation and weakening of
traditional leadership hold
on local councils
was increasingly emphasized.
LOCAL
GOVERNMENT REFORMS SINCE 1976 AND BEYOND
In 1976, it
was felt that
these reforms were
not sufficient to
bring about the type
of socio-economic and
political changes envisaged
at the local governments. In 1976,
a uniform structure
was introduced for
local councils all
over the federation. Traditional
rulers were denied of roles in the running of the councils.
The council was made
a third-tier of government with a population of not less than 150,000 people or more than 800,000. Specific functions were
defined for the council.
All the provisions
of the 1976
reforms were incorporated
into the 1979 constitution with the
introduction of presidential
system of government. This 1976 reform
re-defined local governments and changed their orientation from field administrations of
the state governments
to being simultaneous
local government structures that
were responsible to
the electorate. The
reform introduced a most
innovative and rather
radical departure from
the existing structured pattern
of local government in the country.
High-lights of the reform are:
Abolition of the
old divisional administration system
previously in operation in
several parts of the country,
Provision of a
multi-purpose, single-tier local
authorities, tagged local government with chief executive system
of management;
Provision of federal grants to be disbursed to local
governments through the states;
Introduction of Supervisory Councillorship
particularly in the
Southern States. Each of the
Supervisors was to be in charge of one or more related departments in the local
council.
The progress made
in local government
reforms in 1976
was virtually eclipsed in
the early 1980s,
when the authority
vested by the 1979
constitution in the states
to create local
government led to
proliferation of local governments. This had the perverse effects of
both stressing the limited capacity for governance at the local government
level and of intensifying the problem of sharing the limited resources among a
vastly increased number of local governments. Moreover, the reform failed to
address the issue of power separation between the arms of
government as is
typically the case
in a Presidential system of government.
However, all the provisions of, the 1976 reforms were incorporated into the
1979 Constitution with
the introduction of
presidential system of government
DASUKI LOCAL
GOVERNMENT REVIEW COMMITTEE OF
1984
As a result of these noticeable inadequacies, it was felt
that the 1976 nation-wide local
government reforms were
not sufficiently able
to generate the desire impact. This
led to the setting up
of the Dasuki Local Government Review Committee in
1984. In 1986, Alhaji Ibrahim Dasuki Report
made improvement on the
state of local
councils. The exercise
ended up in worsening the problem of local government. The
government white paper subordinated the local government to the
States. External revenues to local
governments were drastically reduced.
State governments were now to make available only 10 per cent of their
internal revenues to the local government, which they failed to do. The subordination of the local governments
to the States was completed
with the introduction
of Sole- Administrators, who became
agents of the State
governments and the
gain of 1976 reform
was lost. The recommendations
also led to the scrapping of the state ministries of local council in 1988
and the
policy of direct disbursement of statutory allocations was
introduced.
LOCAL
GOVERNMENT REFORM OF 1988
Following the recommendations of
another Local Government
Review Commission in 1988, the Federal government adopted a number of
measures to strengthen local government.
The new measures were:
Abolishing
State Ministries of
local government, which
had extensive review and
supervisory authority over
local governments and
its replacement by a
department of Local
Government in the
Governor’s office;
Paying federal allocations to local governments directly;
By-passing State government in Statutory allocations, which
have moved from 10 per cent to 23 per cent;
Strengthening
local government financial
administration by granting local government’s authority to prepare and approve
their own budgets and taxes
independently of State governments;
Rationalizing local government organizations;
Transferring primary
education and primary healthcare
and all related personnel and facilities to local
government;
Creating the office
of Director of
Local government Audit
as well as setting up local government Alarm Committee
and Involving traditional rulers in local government affairs
ADDITIONAL
GOVERNMENT REFORMS
Additional 149 councils were created in 1989 and new
allocation formula gave 15 per cent to the councils.
Primary Health care
programme was transferred
to the local council in 1990.
Primary school administration followed
in 1991. There
was separation of power and appointment of political secretaries.
Local Council Service
Commission was abolished
in 1992 and
later reinstated. The revenue allocation formula was raised to 20
per cent. Later
the councils were
increased to 774,
with administration and financial autonomy granted.
Gains in Council
reforms appeared harmed
by the 1999 Constitution, which introduced ambiguity
and contradictions in the control and
running of the
local councils. For
example, Section 7 (I)
States: "The system
of Local Government
by democratically elected local
councils is under
this constitution guaranteed; and
accordingly, the government of every state shall subject to
Section 8 of
this constitution, ensure their
existence under a law
which provide for
the establishment structure,
composition, finance and functions of such councils."
Section 7 (6a) provides
that "the National
Assembly shall make provisions for statutory allocation of
public revenue to local councils in the federation." And Section 7(6b)
compounds the confusion by stating that "House of Assembly of a State
shall make provisions for statutory allocation of public revenue to local
councils, within the state."
In addition, Section
8 (5 and
6) empowers the
National Assembly to legislate on new
councils before they
can become legal. With the state government, state House of Assembly
and the National
Assembly all
having roles to
play in the
affairs of the
local council, it
is not a surprise
that confusion, intrigues
and non-performance has
been the lot of governance at the
grassroots levels, hence the need for reforms.
LOCAL
GOVERNMENT REVIEW OF 2004.
This review took
place under the
chairmanship of the
Late Etsu Nupe, Alhaji Umaru
Sanda Ndayako and later replaced by Alhaji Liman Ciroma. The Federal
Government issued white
paper on the
Report and the
National Council of States endorsed the report. The contents of the report were:
It retained the existing 774 local government councils;
All local government council must submit their annual budgets to their State Houses of
Assembly for approval;
Ensure that
whatever is due
to local governments
is made available
to them, including 10 per cent of the monthly generated revenue or
whatever portion of money that comes from the federal to the States that is
meant for the local government;
That local government should fund their various services
and Agencies, including paying
salaries of paramount
Traditional Rulers and
primary school teachers.
Administration of local government is purely the
responsibility of State House of Assembly, which will make appropriate
legislation and Establishment of inspectorate department to enforce compliance
with the local government budget as
approved by the planning and legal
units in the local government
councils.
In 2005, another
provision was enacted
into law by
the National Assembly which
empowers Local Government
Allocation to be
paid directly to them, instead of the previous arrangement of having
State-Local Joint Account. President Buhari recently reverted to this format
too after the 2019 General Elections. Statutory allocation meant for local
government was increased to 23 per
cent. The idea
of paying the
statutory allocation direct to
local government is to forestall the possibility of State Governments
manipulation of the joint
account to their
favour. This latest
provision has received criticism from the Conference of
Assembly of Speakers, who looked at such provision as
unconstitutional and encouraging
corruptions in Local Government Administration. Though, the
Assembly of Speakers
criticize this provision,
majority of Nigerians welcome this development, in view of clever manipulations of State Governments
to State-Local Government Joint Accounts.
It was believed that
the reform would
enable the Local Government Councils
fulfill their primary
functions of grass-root development.
Another important innovation arising from the reform was
the policy decision to provide training at all levels for all categories of
local government officials. Before
then, local government positions
were filled by
unskilled functionaries, most of them with a maximum of primary or secondary school
education. The reform
initiated training programmes
for senior local government officials
in three centers
-- the Universities
of Ife, Zaria
and Nsukka.
These reforms led
to a considerable
change of Nigerian
administrative and political
institutions. It has become a
primary level of grassroots
democracy and distribution of socio-economic programmes in Nigeria.
CLASSIFICATION OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT SYSTEM
Local
government systems are
classified into three
major groups, namely:
i) The French local
government system
ii) The Anglo-Saxon
local government system and
iii) The communist local government system
THE FRENCH SYSTEM
In the French system, local governments are regarded as the
local arm of the central government.
Under this system,
the local government councils are
given important power
and duties, which
they exercise through their
principal officers, the
mayor. The proceedings
of their deliberations, however,
are subject to the direction, approval or veto of a civil servant (the
perfect), who represents the government of
French in the field. The French
system is among the most non -representative. Its basic
structure, codified by Napoleon
1, developed out
of the need of revolutionary
France to curtail
the power of
local notables, while hastening government
reform. It stresses clear
lines of authority, reaching from the central
government’s ministry of the interior through the centrally appointed prefect
of the department to
the municipality, which has a
locally elected mayor and municipal
council. The prefect, being both
the chief executive
of the department
and the representative of the
central bureaucracy, provides
the channel of centralization, with
wide authority to
over-rule local councils
and supervise local expenditures. Variants
of this system
are found throughout Europe and
in former French colonies.
Between the periods
1971 to the early part of 1979, the three states of Nigeria (East
Central, South Eastern
and Rivers States)
structured their local governments deliberately after the
French system. The Mid-West State latter borrowed a leaf
from the
Eastern states. The reason for this system was to whittle down the autonomy of local government and solve the
problem of abuse of power by them.
ANGLO-SAXON SYSTEM
The British system
of local government
is most representative of the
major types and
has been the
model of most of that
country’s former colonies.
This model is
characterize d by granting
autonomy to local government s by
the central government.
These powers were
usually exercised through elected
councils on the
county and sub-county levels. This
system was marked
by le ss central
government interference and greater
local budgetary authority
than in other systems. The
basic point is
that it is
the central government
that determines how much
autonomy the local
government will have.
Theoretically,
the central government
can curtail the
powers exercisable by local
governments. A special
feature of the
British system is its use of an extensive committee system, instead of a
strong executive, for supervising the administration of public services.
MARXIAN SYSTEM
From Marxian perspective,
a question may
be raise d as to whether local
government is not
merely an instrumental value, established
to serve the interest s of the bourgeoisie and to buttress its power
over the peasants and the masses.
In
Marxist-society, there is
no need to
set up local
governments as local government
has vibrant life
of their own,
their activities being designed to serve mainly the interests of the localities. For example, in Russia, local
governments constitute a
part of a
complex of government al agencies
whose main purpose is to serve as an economic planning unit.
In Communist China,
Local Government is
more elaborately structured and
plays a somewhat different role.
Here, the focus of the local government
system is the country. The population of the country ranges from several
hundred thousand to over one million
people. It manages
local public works
including irrigation projects, repairing basic
consumer goods
and agricultural supplies
and equipment. The country is
encouraged to develop internally
integrated and externally independent economies. However, while most countries have complex
systems of local government, those of France and
Great Britain have served as models for much of the rest of the world.
THEORIES,
STRUCTURES AND FUNCTIONS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
THEORIES
OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT
Gboyega (1987) identified two sets of theories. The first
set tries to justify the existence of
or the need for local government on the
ground of its essentiality to
a democratic regime
or for practical
administrative purpose like responsiveness, accountability and control.
The second set
opposes the first that
the existence of
local government cannot
be justified by any of
those reasons mentioned above
in that “local
government institutions are
neither democratic in their
internal operation nor
admit of responsiveness accountability and control”. According to
the latter argument,
local government and
democracy stand at the
extreme of opposite
ends of a
polar or are in
antithetical relationship to one
another, such that
the weakness of
one is the
strength of the
other.
Gboyega (1987) cited
some of the
scholars in first
category as Mill,
Panter-Brick, Wilson, Bentham,
Mackenzie, Harold Laski
and others. Their
lines of arguments as expressed
by Gboyega (1987), are;
(a) services
are made relevance
to local people
and are locally administered
(b) provides
education in citizenship
(c) provides
training in political leadership
(d) makes available
to the government
information about localities which is
essential for adequately
meeting their need
efficiently, and minimizes concentration
of political power
by diffusing it a
reality,
(e) The values
stated above promote
democracy and contribute
to the development of democratic climate
In domesticating
the above theories, Oyediran (1998)
argues with reference to Nigeria that;
(1) certain
functions of local government are purely local in character and should be
locally demanded ,
(2) local government
gives a viable
opportunity for education
and citizenship (political education). In
other words, local
government provides an opportunity for democratic decision making.
(3) Local council
is more easily
held accountable to
local groups and individuals than the otherlevels of
government and their agencies.
(4) Local government
is a training
ground for state
and national political leaders, particularly
in a developing
country, such as:
Nigeria. Local government has
important role to play in national development.
However,
three separate theories of local
government are common in literature.
They are:
1. Democratic - participatory school of thought
2. Efficiency – service school of thought
3. Resource mobilization theory
DEMOCRATIC – PARTICIPATORY THEORY
This school of thoug ht hold the view t hat local
governments exist solely for the
purpose of promot ing democracy and
participation at the grassroots level, thereby bringing government
nearer to the people (Adamolekun, et al; 1988: 62). Local government
offers the local
people the opportunity
to manage their affairs. It is a tool for grassroots democracy.
EFFICIENCY – SERVICES THEORY
This school of
thought emphasizes efficient
service delivery. There are
some services, such
as: local roads,
distri bution of water supply,
housing for low
income groups, health
services, agriculture, are of
paramount importance to
local needs. Local governance in terms
of efficient delivery of
services is, therefore, inevitable. Local
government can provide
services to local
nee ds far more efficient ly and
economically than the
central government . (Adamelekun, et al. 1988: 12)
RESOURCE MOBILIZATION THEORY
The third justification
is that local
governments permit local resources both
human and malarial
to be mobilized
for rural development. Local
governments are, thus, veritable
instruments most strategically
placed for stimulating grassroots development and bringing about rural
transformation (Eminue, 2006:31)
In summary, the theories above emphasize certain basic
elements that explain the role of local government administration:
1. Citizen’s participation in the management of local
affairs.
2. Efficient and
efficient provision of
essential services or
service delivery
3. Resources mobilization for development purposes.
STRUCTURES
OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT
Nigeria
operates presidential system
of government since
1979. The local government
administ ration as the
third-tier of government
in Nigeria has its powers divided into three arms of government. There is plurality ofadminist rative structure.
They include the
executive arm and legislative
arm. In
this unit, we shall
examine the administrative structures of local government.
ADMINISTRATIVE
STRUCTURE OF EXECUTIVE ARM
The Executive arm
of local government
administration comprises the chairman, vice-chairman, supervisors, the
secretary and other principal officers of the local
government. The office of the secretary to the local government is now
political. The staff of the local government (career civil
servants) constitut es the
administrative unit which
is under the supervision
of the executive
arm of government.
They comprise of the “Head of Personnel Management, Heads of department
of works, education, agriculture,
health, finance and
supplies”
The Heads of
departments are subjected
to annual performance evaluation based
on concrete achievement.
Each Head of
department will be evaluated by
the Secretary to local
government in consultation
with the
chairman. The secretary
will in turn
be evaluated by the
chairman of the relevant local government.
STRUCTURE
OF THE LEGISLATURE
The Legislative arm
of local government
consists of elected councilors representing various
wards in the
local government. The
Council is the legislative arm and
consists of the Leader, the
Deputy Leader and Councilors. The
Council is conferred with the power to make bye -laws. To become
effective, such bye-laws
must be assented
to by the Chairman
of the Local
Government Council. The
Chairman may, however, withhold
his assent in
exercise of his power
of veto. This could be over-ridden by two-third
majority of members if the Chairman refuses to assent to bye-law duly passed by
the Council.
FUNCTIONS
OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT
The functions of
local governments in Nigeria as a
third-tier of government is clearly recognized
in the Fourth
Schedule of 1979,
1989 and 1999 constitution, Section 7(1) and these
include (Quoted in Eneanya, 2012).
MANDATORY
LOCAL GOVERNMENT FUNCTIONS
i. Collection of
rates (including tenement
rates) radio, television and non-mechanically propelled
vehicle licenses( bicycles
and trucks);
ii.
Establishment and maintenance
of cemeteries, burial
grounds, homes for destitute
and infirm, market,
motor-parks, public conveniences, roads,
drawn and recreation
facilities (including
play-grounds and parks);
iii.
Construction and maintenance
of roads, streets
lighting, drains and other public
highways, parks, gardens, open spaces or
such facilities as may
be prescribed from
time to time
by the State House of Assembly;
iv. Assessment of
privately owned house
or tenements for
the purpose of levying such rates
as may
be prescribed by the house of
Assembly of State;
v. Naming of roads
and streets and numbering of houses;
vi. Licensing,
regulation and control of the sale of liquor.
vii. Control and
regulation of outdoor
advertising and hoardings, pots, shops, kiosks, restaurants
and laundries;
viii. Registration
of all births, deaths and marriages.
FUNCTIONS
IN WHICH LOCAL GOVERNMENTS ARE TO PARTICIPATE
i. State economic
planning and development;
ii. Provision and
maintenance of primary
education services, adult and vocational education;
iii.
Development of agriculture
and natural resources
(other than the exploitation of
minerals)
iv. Provision and
maintenance of health services.
v. Other functions
as may be
conferred on a
local government council by the
House of Assembly of the State.
The functions of local government are numerous. The Fourth Schedule of the 1999 Constitution
made elaborate provisions on the
functions of local government . These functions cut across all
states of the federation. However, the environment
of every local
government council will to
a large extent
determine the nature and
volume of the functions
of the local
government. For instance, the
functions of urban local governments
will significantly differ from that of rural local government s in respect of
the degree of involvement and nature of the roles
to be
performed. Despite this, all
local governments throughout the federation shall perform these functions.
LEGISLATIVE
FUNCTIONS
The local government Council’s legislative arm consists of
the Leader, the Deputy Leader and Councilors.
The powers vested in the Council as conferred on it by law can be
described as its functions.
The Legislative arm of local government is conferred with
powers and functions as follows:
- Debating, approving or amending the annual budget
proposed by the Executive arm. Though,
the Chairman could veto these activities, members of the Council could
over-ride this decision by two-third majority votes;
- Making of bye-laws.
Bye-laws have the force of law within the local government are;
- Vetting and monitoring the implementation of projects and
programmes in the annual budget of the local government;
- Examining and de bating the monthly statements of income
and expenditure rendered to it by the Chairman of Local government; and
-
Advising, consulting and liaising with the Chairman of the
Local government.
MODE OF
EXERCISING LEGISLATIVE POWERS
The legislative powers vested in the local government
Council shall be exercised by bye-laws duly passed by the Council. To become effective, such bye-laws must be
assented to by the Chairman of the Local Government, if the bye-law is passed
again by the Council by two-third majority of members. In such cases, the by e-laws shall become
effective and assent of the Chairman of Local Government shall not be required
in respect of such a bye-law (Eneanya, 2012).
LOCAL
GOVERNMENT REVENUE, PROBLEMS AND CONTROL
The performance of any local government is subject to the
availability of funds. There are many
responsibilities of local government that required adequate funding. The sources of revenue of local
government in Nigeria
include: the
external and internal sources.
EXTERNAL
SOURCES
-
Statutory
Allocation from federal
Government – the
Nigerian constitution
stipulates that the
revenue of the
federation shall be shared
between the three
tiers of government
federal, state and local
government s. Consequently, local governments receive a percentage of the federally-generated revenue
annually. This percentage
changes with time, according
to acts and
decrees. Presently, it
stands at slightly above 20% .
-
Grants from the
federal or state
government grants are
money made available to
local government by
federal or state
governments to help them large
projects or provision
of infrastructure special
grants may also be
made available by Federal or
state government to
assist local government provide
some services of
national importance, such
as; education agriculture, health
environmental/ecological
problems or natural disasters.
-
Value Added Tax VAT) – Local government share from value
Added tax generated revenue that
distributed by the
federal government Nigeria. Value Added Tax (VAT) system started
in Nigeria in 1995.
INTERNAL
SOURCES
Revenue can also be generated internally: -
(i) Loans from Bank – The local government can obtain loans
from financial institutions to
enable them finance
development projects, such
as: water supply, rural
electricity, construction of
roads and provision
of health facilities.
This is however, subject to the approval of state
government.
(ii) Rates – This refers
to the levies collected by local government
authorities from the
services the council
provides. The rates are collected on market skills, motor
Parks, supermarkets and shops, some rates
are also collected
from bicycle and
motorcycle licences television, radio sets etc.
Special levies This refers to levies imposed on the
residents of local governments as a means of generating internal
revenue.
Income from commercial
ventures one of
the sources of revenue to local governments is income from their commercial
activities. Some local
governments maintain transport services, farms,
holiday resorts, consultancy
services, guest houses etc.
(iii)
Revenue from investments –
local government derive revenue by
investing their money
in profit yielding
economic ventures, such as buying
of shares, entering into
partnership with viable commercial organizations and
financing economic projects that
could provide good revenue in return.
(iv)
Personal income tax
– Local government
councils collect income taxes
from non-salary earners, keep some
percentage and pay the balance to the state government.
(v) Court fines –
Court fines are
imposed on individuals
that violate local government
bye-laws, sanitary regulations
and ban on street t rading and hawking.
(vi) Property or
tenement rate – Property
or tenement rate
is impose d on-the owners of
private and commercial houses. It is base d on the value of the building and
property.
(vii) Donations –
Donations from public spirited individuals in the local
government organizes launching
from special community project.
(viii)
Miscellaneous – Sales
of seized goods
and selling of Asset (Ashiru, 1998:5).
Moreover, local government
can raise revenue from
other unexplored areas,
such as: building residential estates,
floating micro-finance banks,
engaging in trading activities,
poultry, food processing
transport activities and other
small scale business.
IMPROVING
THE REVENUE GENERATION CAPACITY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT
Public finance management connotes the receipt and
application of funds. To improve the operational activities of local government
and improve on revenue generation demands new strategies. Bribery and corrupt ion are the major problem
in the local governments. Most revenues collected end up in private pockets.
Revenue collectors should be adequately trained and monitored other revenue
leakages avenues to private pockets in the local governments are:
finance/revenue section, billing and tax records section, property valuation
and pay roll etc. These sections can be computerized to meet contemporary
accounting standards and facilitate inspection when needs arises (Ojofertimi,
1998:11). Measures should also be put in place to minimize the discretion of
assessors, especially in motor parks and tenement rates. Efficient and fraud
proof supervision machinery can make revenue generated safe for socio-economic
development. Joint state – local g overnment account – this joint account
should be stopped as state governments in Nigeria have found as avenue to
divert local government funds and starve LGs of fund. The federal decision to
allocate fund directly to local governments, if enforced would save the
situation.
SUGGESTIONS
TO IMPROVE REVENUE GENERATION
The following suggestions can boost revenue base in local
government:
(i) Allowing
local governments to
receive direct allocation
from federation account, instead
of passing through “joint state-local government account”.
(ii)
Effective monitoring of revenue collection officers. Some
officers use fake receipts
and other fraudulent
activities to administer
revenue collection. In most
cases, fund generated
often find itself
in private pockets. Close
monitoring and supervisions would check such leakages.
(iii)
Federal and State
governments should increase
grant-in-aid to local governments in
view of so
many projects begging
for attention at the
grass-root levels,
(iv) Local
government should partner with private sectors for developmental Projects. The
rapid nature of urbanization calls for
corporate bodies to be aware of their social responsibilities in this regard.
(v) Local
governments should embark on people-oriented
projects, such as: employment generation
projects, production and
trading activities, food processing projects,
etc. Such projects
would not only
promote employment generation but contribute in socio-economic
development.
(vi) Local governments
can raise additional revenue by
introducing fees and charges
in such of its services, preventing fraud and effective checks on tax evaders (Ugwu,
2003: 47).
(iv) The council
should be elected
and members elect
chairman and cabinet members.
The chairman and
his cabinet would
work full time, while
councilors would work
part-time and be paid
sitting allowances. This would
reduce the cost of governance at the local level. The jumbo pay enjoyed presently by elected
chairman and councilors are the
cause of “do
or die” politics. By that arrangement, persons with means of
livelihood and genuine interest to serve will emerge, as against those who see
the grassroots politics as a “cow to be milked”.
(v) Local
governments can raise
additional revenue through
a variety of means,
such as: increasing
their user fees
and charges, raising
local taxes, introducing new taxes ,
introducing new taxes and
charges, and selling of assets, etc.
(vi) The local government should use improvement
programmes, by adopting effective cost-cutting devices to achieve objectives.
(vii) The Planning, Research and Statistics unit
of the local
government should use computer
system to prepare
data bank on
properties, building, number of vehicles using the motors parks, market
stalls, and make effective planning
of sources of
revenue and how
to mobilize these resource for
revenue generation.
(viii) Finally,
there is
need to maintain
accountability, transparency and effective
record management of revenue
generated . In other words,
there is
need to computerize
finance and revenue
section of local government in order to sustain financial
accountability and probity.
PROBLEMS
OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN NIGERIA
The following are the problems of local government
administration:
(i) Inadequate
Finance
Most Local Governments do not have enough fund to carry
out its statutory responsibilities. The internally generated funds are inadequate
grants and federal allocated
revenues are manipulated by most state
governments, through Joint-Account
and funds diverted. Hence, funds
available to local
governments are grossly
inadequate that will enable
the comical provide
social amenities and
other community development projects.
Financial autonomy is
host by operation of
Joint-Account by states and local governments.
(ii) Bribery and
Corruption
Bribery and corruption involving the
officials of the local
governments undermine the effective
performance of the
local government administration.
Much money that should accrue to
local governments is lost
to personal pockets
through the use
of fake receipts
and inefficient collection mechanisms.
(iii) Shortage of
skilled personnel
There is acute
shortage of the
right caliber of
personnel for local government s. Local governments need
competent trained, experienced and
competent personnel to provide an efficient and effective service to the
public.
(iv) Political
Interference
State and Federal Governments unnecessarily hinder local
government programmes and policies even
where they do
not contradict current statutes or
policies. In addition, political
parties interfere with
the appointment of personnel-along party
lines in local governments when
their members are in power.
(v) Poor Leadership
There is the
paucity of top
leadership positions, which
could coordinate and direct
the departmental heads.
Over the years,
there has been the problem of having competent leadership.
Tribalism, Nepotism and
Favouritism. These feature
in the appointment promotion
and discipline and
transfer of local government staff.
These constitute another problem
of commitment to ethnic, sectional and
partisan personal interests have made it difficulty and sometimes
impossible. For many
local government authorities
to function effectively (Eneamya, 2009).
(vi) Gradual Erosion
of Power and autonomy.
Most state governments
have taken over
certain services of
the local governments by
excessive control of
local government activities.
The state governments established
Local Government activities.
The State
Governments
established Local Government
service commissions to help them appoint promote, transfer and
terminate employees. Beside, at the governments
there is office
of Adviser on
political and Local government matters. The State Houses of
Assembly are empowered to
provide for the
establishment, structure,
composition, finance and functions of
such Local Governments. There is
also provision for
control of Local
Government finance by
State Houses of Assembly
(Constitution of 1999,
chapter and sections
7 (i) and chapter 6 subsections 162 subsections
6 and 8). This has made
Local Government appendages
of State Government,
hence their under-performances and
ineffectiveness (Ugwu, 2003:52).
(vii) Partisan
Politics and victimization
Elected counselors see
themselves as the
party’s representative in the council. Besides, where the political
party control the chairmanship and councillorship position in
the Local Governments,
there is a situation of
antagonism and non-cooperation, stalling
or showing down
the Local Government programmes.
(viii) Unequal size
of Local government
The indiscriminate creation of Local Governments by Federal
and State Governments has resulted
in a situation,
where some Local Governments are large to effectively administer their whole
area, while others are small
to generate revenue
to undertake meaningful programme.
(ix) Poor salaries and conditions of service. The conditions
of service in the Local Governments are often very poor of the Local
Governments to attract high quality personnel.
CONTROL
OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT
The 1999 Constitution
in its provisions
of Section 7, re
organizes the local government
system and also
guarantees it. Besides,
the State government by the same
provision of Section
7 of the
Constitution exercises
authority over the
local government. By
virtue of this provision, every
State government is
to ensure the
existence of democratically elected
local government councils
under a law
which provides for their
establishment, structure, composition,
finance and functions. The implication of the above is that a local
government council cannot exercise the functions allocated to it in the Fourth
Schedule to the Constitution until the State House of Assembly had passed
a law, which
empowers the local
government councils to perform
those functions listed
in the Fourth
Schedule to the Constitution. Local Governments are
controlled through the following mechanisms:-
Legislature control.
Local Governments
are established by
an act of
parliament or decree stating their
functions, powers and limitations. Their
operations are guided by
these laws. Furthermore, the legislature
could amend these laws or
investigate the performance
of or allegations
about particular Local
Governments.
Administrative control.
The power of
supervising the activities
of Local governments
is delegated to the
|Ministry or department
responsible for Local government . The
department is empowered
to approve their
annual budgetary estimates, major
projects, strategies of implementation and bye-laws before
they take effect.
There is also internal audit
that checks the accuracy according records within the councils. The commissioner
of Local government
uses default power
to control the Local
government.
Dissatisfied members of the public can seek redress
through the public complaints
commission where their
rights and liberties
are violated by Local
government employees. The commission could investigate the activities of such
employees and recommend punitive or corrective measures.
Financial control
The supervisory department
is empowered to
approve or reject
Local government budgetary estimates.
They may not introduce
rates or levies,
implement new projects
or obtain internal
or external loans without approval by the Supervisory
Ministry. The Executive council of a
State may exempt
any persons or
class of persons
within a Local governments area
of that Stat e
from liability government
imposed by the Local
government (Ezeani, 200:269).
State’s auditor-general audit the accounts of Local governments.
Judiciary control
Local government
s are
legal entities which
can sue and
be sued. Courts can
call Local government
or their official
to order if
they breach any l aw
establishing or guiding
them. The courts can declare their actions illegal or
unconstitutional if they violate
the provisions of the constitution.
HUMAN
RESOURCES MANAGEMENT IN LOCAL GOVERNMENT
To attract the skilled personnel required and protect
career Local Government officials from
the buffetings of partisan politics, there is the need to ensure the
maximum utilization of the
scarce high-calibre manpower resources available to Local
Government.
STAFFING FUNCTION
The local
government has important
staffing function to
perform (Guidelines of
Local government reform, 1976:19):
1. Ensuring that
they are available
quantity and quality
staff that would
enable them discharge their
responsibilities;
2. Laying down the
terms and conditions of ser vice for
local government staff, so as to ensure that they are directly equated to those
of the State Civil Service;
3. Promote local
gover nment training schemes
at various levels
for administrative, financial,
professional and technical staff in cooperation with training institutions and
other government ministries.
RECRUITMENT
IN LOCAL GOVERNMENT
Each Local Government
shall undertake the
appointment, discipline and
promotion of its staff on Grade Levels 01-06 under general
and unified guidelines to be provided by the Local Government Service
Commission, while officers
on Grade levels
07 and above
shall be appointed, posted,
disciplined and promoted by the Local Gover nment Service
Commission, provided that all appointments shall be made to unfrozen posts in the approved budget of the
Local Government.
With respect to recruitment, appropriate pre-entry
qualifications shall be uniformly applied as provided in
the approved scheme
of service for
Local Government employees
whose provisions shall be STRICTLY applied.
In carrying out
recruitment into the Local Government Service, the
Local Government and Local
Government Service Commission shall take full account of the geographical
spread and socio-economic diversities of the Local Gover nment Area.
Each Local Government
shall be restructured
vertically and horizontally
to management efficiency and
effectiveness, high degree of specialization,
job satisfaction, optimum span of control and clear lines of authority
and responsibility .
All
recruitments by the
Local Government Junior
Staff Management Committee
(JSMC) must, as a rule,
be in consonance
with the manpower
needs of the
Local government as provided in the approved Local Government
Estimates. Any violation of the provision of the Section will be
surcharged and the
person so irr egularly
appointed be summarily
removed from the service of the Local Government. All applicants for
positions in Grade Levels 01-06 in a Local Government shall apply directly to
the Local Government of their choice.
In all cases,
all eligible candidates for appointments shall be interviewed by
the Junior Staff Management Committee. All direct appointment to post on Grade
Levels 07 and above be by open advertisement to the general public, and copies
of such advertisements shall be sent to all the Local Governments within the
State.
All letters of appointment
shall be signed
by the Head
of the Department
of personnel Management in the
case of posts graded 01-06, and by the Secretary of the Local Government
Service Commission in the post on Grade Levels 07 and above. Returns of all appointments made by each
Local Government shall
be rendered monthly
to the Local
Government Services Commission.(Eneanya, 2012).
TEMPORARY
APPOINTMENT
Recruitment of
persons into vacation,
part-time or temporary
post not exceeding
three months shall be
decentralized. Returns of all
vacation, part-time and temporary appointment made shall be sent to the Local
Government Service Commission monthly. Such returns shall show the
name, date of
birth, date of
appointment, grade, qualifications State
of origin .of employee
and up- to-date, intra-state
distribution of existing staff
in the grade
in the Local Government.
ACTING
APPOINTMENT
Acting appointments, where necessary, shall be approved by
the Chairman Local Government in
respect of local
Government employees on
Grade Levels 01-06
and relevant returns rendered to the
commission on monthly basis.
In case of officers on Grade
07 and above, acting appointment,
where necessary, shall be approved
by the Local Government Service Commission.
DISABLED
PERSONS APPOINTMENT
All Local
Governments shall observe the
presidential order which grants disabled persons special concessions in appointment
to posts in the public service. All returns and
information required to be submitted
to the Local
Government Service Commission
shall be so submitted not later than the last day of the subsequent month. Such returns
shall be accompanied
with the minutes
of the relevant
meeting of the
Junior Staff Management
Committee.
CONTRACT
APPOINTMENT
The provision of the Local Government Staff Regulations
shall apply in all cases to contract appointments, except in the case of non-Nigerians married to Nigerians.
Such Nigerians shall remain on contract until granted Nigerian citizenship.
Where they are not eligible for Nigerian citizenship, then contract shall be reviewed
every two years and they shall be
considered for promotion along with
their colleagues as
appropriate, as long
as they stay
married to Nigerians.
Retired officers may only be re-engaged into career posts
in accordance with the Rules and Regulations spelt out in the existing Local Government
Staff Regulations.
JUNIOR
STAFF RECRUITMENT
Each local government shall have Junior Staff Management Committee (JSMC), which will have responsibility for the
appointment, promotion and discipline of
officers on grade levels 01-06. In all cases,
all eligible candidates for appointments
shall be interviewed
by Junior Staff Management Committee.
In all cases, the composition of JSMC shall: Reflect the geographical
spread of the local government area;
The JSMC shall
consist of one representative
from each department
of local government not below grade
level 09 and
shall be chaired
by the Head
of Department of Personnel Management in the local government.
The Committee shall
determine personnel matters of local
government employee on grade levels
01-06.
All applicants for positions on grade levels 01-06 in a
local government shall apply directly to the local government area of their
choice.
SENIOR
STAFF RECRUITMENT
The appointment, promotion and discipline of officers on
Grade level 07 and above
shall be the responsibility of the local Government Service
Commission;
The principle of geographical spread and socio- economic
diversity of the state shall be take into full account;
All direct appointments to the post on Grade levels 07 and
above shall be by open advertisement to the general public and copies of such
advertisements shall be sent to all local governments within the state.
CONFIRMATION
OF APPOINTMENT
Confirmation of all probationary appointments shall be
carried out by the Local Governments in
the case of
officers on Grade
levels 01-06 and
by the Local
Government Service Commission
in the case of officers on Grade Level 07 and above. The appropriate Heads of
Department shall make recommendations to
the Head of the Department
of personnel management for
consideration of the
Junior Staff Management
Committee (JSMC). The names
of officers so
confirmed shall be
submitted on a
monthly basis to
the Local Government Service
Commission for gazette action.
LOCAL
GOVERNMENT SERVICE COMMISSION
The Local Government Service Commission shall perform the
following functions:
(a) Appoint, post, promote
and discipline Local Government
employees on Grade Level 07 and above. In doing so, the
principle of geographical spread and socio-economic diversity of the State
shall be taken into full account.
The guidelines for promotion shall be based on the generally accepted principle
of experience, performance on
the job, length
of ser vice, good conduct, relevant qualification, training,
performance at interview
and relevant examination where appropriate;
(b) set up
general uniform guidelines,
for appointment, posting,
promotion and discipline;
(c) Monitor the
activities of each
Local Government on
appointment, discipline and promotion of Local Gover nment employees on Grade 01-06,
in order to ensure that the guidelines are strictly and uniformly applied.
(d) Serve as
an Appellate body
for all petitions
from Local Governments
in respect of appointments. promotions
and discipline; the decision of the Local Government Service Commission shall be binding on all
Local Governments and above shall have the right to appeal to the Governor
(e) Maintain comprehensive
and up-to-date seniority
lists and nominal
rolls the local Government Service as a whole;
(f) submit an annual report of its activities to
(i) all Chairman of
Local Government in the State
(ii) the office of
the State Governor, and
(iii) the State
House of Assembly
(g) Maintain a monthly Local Government gazette newsletter
to convey, in particular
(i) the bye-law
passed by the Local Governments in the State and
(ii) staff movements
including new appointments, confirmations, promotions
and retirement/dismissal
( h) Assures
responsibility for manpower planning, development and training in the senior
cadres (GL 07 and above) of the Local Government Service;
(i) keeps the
1% Local Government
Training fund for
the training of
members of the Unified Staff
(j)
Restructure and strengthen
the Department and
thereafter, periodically review
and propose modifications in operational method and organizational
structure of the Local Government Services. .
(k) The Local
Government Staff Pension
Board Office, which
is at present
a separate office, shall remain
so. (Eneanya, 2012.
PROMOTION,
TRANSFER, DISCIPLINE AND RETIREMENT IN LOCAL GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
A promotion is a move of
an employee to a job
within the organization which
has greater
importance and usually
higher pay. Frequently the job has
higher status and carries improved
fringe benefits and privileges. Its purpose is to improve both the
utilization and motivation of
employees. A
Transfer connotes a
move to a
job within the
organisation which has approximately equal importance,
status and pay.
Discipline is employed in organizations to
correct misconduct or
deviant behavior to rules and regulations.
Retirement of employees
is based on age
attainment of 60 years or 35 years of service, whichever comes first
STAFF PERFORMANCE AND PROMOTION
Rewards and sanctions shall be based
on concrete measurable performance.
All promotions shall be based on relative merit (performance, seniority,
additional qualifications, and so on). Local Government shall have power to
promote and give advancements to all staff on Grade- Levels G 1 -06 subjected
to the following guidelines:
The Head of
the Department of Personnel
Management shall prepare,
at the end of
every year, comprehensive staff list showing the order of seniority of a Staff
in each grade on Grade Levels 01-06, while the Secretary to the Local
Government Service Commission shall prepare same in respect of officers on
Grade Levels 07 and above within each cadre. Seniority shall be based on the
provisions of the existing rules. All officers
who fall within
the field of
selection for any
promotion exercise shall
be considered except those who
are under disciplinary action.
The minimum number of
years that an officer must spend in a post before being considered
eligible to come within the field of
selection for promotion shall be as follows:
Grade Levels of Staff Number of years in post
01-06 Minimum of 2 (two) years
07-14 Minimum of 3
(three) years
.15-16- Minimum of 4
(four) years
All Local Governments and Local Government Service Commissions
shall take into account APER (Annual Per for mance Evaluation Report) of each officer for the last 3 years
in the service. Each APER shall
be summarized and
the equivalent marks
shall be confirmed
or vetted by the moderating officers and shall be shown on the APER
form. Staff on Grade Levels
07 and above
who are being
considered for promotion
must appear before the
Local Government Service
Commission for promotion
interview. In the case of officers entering into the Senior
Management Grade at Grade Level 14, they must in addition, pass proficiency
examination or undergo prescribed
course. There shall also
be promotion examination for
promotion from Grade levels 06-07. However, where the Grade level 06 post in
training post, then advancement from
Grade Level 06-07
shall be based
on APER score only
In the case of officers in the professional cadres moving
from Grade Level 08 to grade Level 09, where the promotions are not subjected
to vacancies, each such officer shall be
required to pass suitable advancement test while on grade level 08. In the alternative, their promotion
may be based on prescribed courses. The criteria for
promotion shall be:
(i) basic
qualification
(ii) performance (as
assessed under APER)
(iii) interview
performance;
(iv) Additional
qualification/cognate experience and
(v) Seniority
The criteria shall normally be weight as follows:
Percentage
Performance ------------------------
------------------------------- 50
Interview
------------------------------------------------------------- 30
Additional Qualification/Examination -------------------------15
Seniority
--------------------------------------------------------------- 5
Where additional
qualification examination is
not an applicant
criteria, then the
weight assigned to performance shall be increased by 15. Similarly, in cases where interview is not
applicable, the weight for performance shall be increases by 30 Local
Government qualification shall render all promotion exercises carried out to
the Local Government Service Commission.
All briefs used
at such meeting
and the minutes
of the meeting must
accompany the returns
in respect of
posts graded on
Grade Levels 01-06.
Returns shall reach the Commission not later than two weeks
from the date of conclusion of the promotion exercise.
National promotion
:- officers on leave
of absence, on secondment, on approval study leave or on special assignment,
who fail within the promotion field of selection, shall be granted,
national promotion, if they are worth of promotion,
Effective Date of promotion
;- The effective date
of promotion shall be either January 1, or July 1, and
promotions shall not normally have retroactive effect. Every exercise shall
be completed the 31st of each year.
STAFF TRANSFER
All transfer shall
be subject to
prescribed conditions for
appointment in addition
to the
following considerations:
No officer shall be considered for transfer-on-promotion or otherwise
to any Local Government or the Unified Local Government Service except
to an advertised post. Applications for transfer of service shall be made to
the Local Government, in case of posts
graded 01-06 and to the
Local Government service Commission
in case of posts graded 07 and
above, and submitted in duplicate supported by the following documents:
(A) Evidence
of qualifications
(B) Satisfactory
APER for
the 2 years
immediately preceding the
date of the application
(C) Officer's Record
of service showing
clearly, the career
progression of the applicant, and
(D) Recommendation
from the applicant's employer, including a statement that the officer will be
released if the application is successful.
An officer may only be considered for
transfer if he
has grade to
which he seeks qualifications,
experience and career progression are:
(i) comparable to
those of officers already in the grade to which he seeks transfer; or
(ii) superior to
those of officers already in the grade
just below that to
which he seeks to be transferred.
Where the number of vacancies is limited,
extra care must be taken to
ensure contemplated transfer would in no way jeopardize prospects of officers
already in the service.
INTER-SERVICE
TRANSFER OF STAFF
In considering
inter-service transfer, the
Local Government-Service Commission
must be satisfied that
there are vacancies
not only in
the relevant grade
but also in
the applicant's discipline or
area of specialization. Once an officer on transfer has agreed to accept an
offer of a position, and the position is lower than that for which he initially applied, he shall not,
after assumption of duty, petition of upgrading or review on account of
comparison with his erstwhile colleagues.
TRANSFER FROM
ONE LOCAL GOVERNMENT
TO ANOTHER LOCAL
GOVERNMENT
WITHIN THE STATE
This shall be
channeled through the
Local Government Service commission
subtract to the availability of
vacancy and the
overall suitability of the
officer seeking transfer of
service. This provision shall apply only to officers on Grade Level
01-06
TRANSFER
FROM A LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN ONE STATE TO A LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN ANOTHER STATE.
This shall be channeled through the Local Government
Service Commission. Transfer from outside the Local Government Service, for
example, where an officer from the federal
or State Civil Service
or from a Federal
or State Government
Parastatal is seeking transfer to the Local Government
Service shall be channeled through the Local Gover nment Service Commission.
SECONDMENT
The initiative for the secondment of civil servants to the
Local Government service shall be taken by a Local Government through the Local
Government Service Commission. At the time of such secondment, the terms of
secondment shall be clear ly stated and accepted by all the parties
concerned. Such secondment shall not
exceed two years in the first instance and not subject to renewal if all the
parties agree.
RIGHT OF
APPEAL
An officer who
is dissatisfied or
aggrieved as a
result of any
decision of the
Junior Staff Management Committee or the Local Government
Service Commission shall have the right of appeal. Appeal against the decisions of the Junior Staff Management Committee shall lie to
the Chairman of
the Local Government
and hereafter to
the Local Government
Service Commission. Appeal
against the decision
of the Local
Government Service Commission
lie to the Commission for a review. After all the
internal avenues for redress or been exhausted, and the petitions to the
Governor shall be forwarded of the officer concerned through the Chairman of
Local Government Service Commission to the Governor, and an advance copy shall
be sent to the Government.
DISCIPLINE
Local Government shall exercise disciplinary power over
their staff on Grade level 01- 06 and the level
Government service commission
on Local government
Service Commission on Local Government employees on Grade Levels
07 and above. Local Returns of
disciplinary cases indicating
names of officers
grade, date of
present appointment, nature of offence and nature of disciplinary action
taken, shall be rendered to the local Government Service Commission within two
weeks of the decision.
As a further check, the Local Government Service Commission
may call for the records used by the
Junior Staff Management
Committee to satisfy itself that justice has been manifestly done.
RETIREMENT
When an employee attains the age of 60 years or 35 years of
ser vice, he/she is retired from service.
Such employee is paid retirement benefits, made up of pension and
gratuity. The pension follows the
provision of Pension Act of 2004. Under
the 2004 Act,
an employee is
required to maintain
an account to
be known as Retirement Savings Account (RSA) in
his/her name and with any Pension Fund Administrator (PFA) of his/her
choice. At the end of his disengagement,
the Pension Fund Administrator that
managed his/her account pays the Pension, while the local government pays the
gratuity, if it is
part of the
disengagement reward. However, an employee is
forbidden from withdrawing from the account until he attains the age of 50 years,
except he/she retires
on health grounds or for any other
reason in accordance
with the terms and
conditions of his employment.
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT IN LOCAL GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
Training has the dual function of utilization and
motivation. By improving employees’ ability to perform and the tasks required by
the company, training allows better use to be made of human resources.
TRAINING PROGRAMME
The Local
Government Service Commission
shall maintain 1%
local government training fund
for the training of members of
the unified staff.
Training provisions
are made at an early stage of an officers career; mid-career training to equip
officers to undertake
supervisory or middle
management responsibility;
and training for
officers with several
or many years
of
experience to enable
them to successfully
discharge the duties
of higher level managerial posts. Some of the courses may be regarded as
falling within the
“mainstream” of the
training programme and
these will normally be
of a fairly
long duration. Others will
need to be
of a shorter period and should
include programmes either of a motivational nature or
designed to give
managerial training to
professional and technical
officers. There should also be specialist courses for officers in their
mid-career, relating to particular
spheres of work, for example in professional/technical subjects
areas or in
management/supervisory techniques. Many of such lectures are to give
participants a good knowledge
of modern procedures,
recent developments, and innovative
methods, etc. Broadly, speaking,
there should be
two objectives in
a local government training
programmes, viz:-
a. To ensure
that the day
to day operations, routines and procedures of local
governments can be
effectively undertaken and
properly understood by the staff.
b. To provide training
to the level which is
necessary to equip
the staff to meet
the more extensive
and ever growing
management administrative , financial and service problem of the future.
TYPES OF TRAINING
ON – THE – JOB TRAINING
An essential element
in many scheme of
staff development is training “on-the-job”. This t raining
technique is demanding in terms of the time of
the supervisor and
sectorial He ad as
well as that,
at times of the
Departmental Head. It is expected
that in every
local government, a great
effort should be
made to make
at least a small start
with the most essential “on- the-
job” progrmames. The seminar or
group discussion approach
is a type
of on-the-job training, which
the secretary should
find very useful
in his efforts
to improve the effectiveness
and efficiency of
local governments
organization. Such programmes
could be mounted on a regular
basis and as frequently
as the work
situation permits. The
seminars could cover the special
requirements of various categories of officers:-
a. Senior Management
Staff
b. Middle Management Staff
c. Professional
and/or Technical Staff
d. Supervisory Staff
e. Junior Staff
From time to time joint seminars might also be held, attended
by staff of two or more
of the categories
of officers indicated
above, for example, supervisory
and junior staff;
or middle management, professional technical
and supervisory staff;
or senior management, middle management
and professional/technical staff.
The seminar should consider
papers prepared mainly
by staff members
of the organization.
TRAINING OFF – THE JOB
A significant part
of the total
training needs of
local governments are met by specialized training
institutions. Some of
the specialized training institutions
offer seminar programmes
appropriate to the needs
of local government
official. Some training
programmes are offered in
universities, such as u niversity of
Ife, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria
and Kaduna Polyte chnic.
Some of the
programmes have nine months duration and are as follows:
i. Certificate in
local government
ii. Diploma in local
government
iii. Higher diploma in local government
iv. Advanced diploma in local government
THE ROLE OF TRAINING OFFICER
On all local
governments, more especially
the lar gest ones,
it will be important
to the success
of staff development
programmes that consideration
should be given to the appointment
of a
training officer. This
officer who would
be directly responsible to
the secretary should be
of considerable seniority
and normally would
combine his training responsibilities with other duties,
including those relating to personnel
matters. The duties of the training officer would probably include:-
i. Drafting of
the staff development
policy for review
by the secretary and
approval by the
local government council, periodic review of
the relevance and
effectiveness of the
staff development policy and
submission of his
findings and recommendations
arising there from to the secretary.
ii. Maintenance of
appropriate records concerning,
inter alia, the prescribed training
courses to be
attended by individual officers and
the appropriate objectives
and level of
them, the period during
which the individual
officers after proper nomination have
actually attended courses,
the results obtained and the subsequent work performance of the officers
concerned;
iii. Maintenance
of very close
contact and cooperation
with the ministry of local
government concerning all staff
development matters and frequent
exchanged of information regarding new or
changing requirements in
this field and
on progress, problems,
constraints, etc; in regard to the
implementation of approved staff development programmes.
iv. Mounting of approved training seminars in the local
government organization and arranging “on-the-job” training programmes.
v. Submission to
the secret ary of
regular progress reports concerning the implementation of
staff development programme
vi. Submission of recommendations to the secretary concerning
staff development matters;
vii.
Consideration of any
proposal e manating from
members of staff of the local
government for the
improvement of the
staff development policy or staff development programmes.
STAFF DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME
For a balanced
staff development programme
(which should be an
import ant objective of staff development policy),
the secretary working in close cooperation with the
ministry of local government will need to have regard to several aspects of the
problem. First, in order to ensure that
a sound basis
exists or can
be built and to enable
newly appointed officers to play a useful role at an early stage in
their career, considerable emphasis will
need to be
placed on induction
training such training would
probably l ast for
2 – 3
days and be
specifically tailored to meet the requirements of each category of officer.
INDUCTION
COURSES OR PROGRAMME
Induction courses would probably need to include:
i. A study of the organization
including its objectives, programmes, projects, staffing etc;
ii. A consideration of the relationship between the
local government and the various
ministries and department
of the state
and federal governments;
iii. One seminar each
on the subject areas
of motivation, discipline and
effective communication. In this regard, it is of the utmost importance to
endeavour to motivate
staff as strongly
as possible at the
outset of their
career in the
direction, for example, of
achieving objectives, meeting
target dates for programmes and projects, effective
management of time;
iv. An examination of the specific work areas of the
trainees and the main
responsibilities
constraints, problems etc; facing them.
There is need, therefore, for a new employee to be inducted
as early as possible after being
deployed. Otherwise, the
new employee may drift into a bad working habits because he
has not been properly informed, and may carry out his duties in an
unsatisfactory manner. It is obvious
that a carefully
planned approach to
meeting personnel
requirements is
recommended involving first the preparation of a state manpower plan
for local government
and subsequently, a
systematic programme of recruitment
within the plan,
by the Local
Government Service Commission. It
will be important that every
effort be made
to streamline the decision
making process in
relation to recruitment matters.
Staff in post in
local governments should
be progressively trained under a carefully
framed staff development policy drawn
up jointly by the ministry
for local government
and the local
government. Training programmes
should be such as
to cover the needs
of all departments and all categories of officers from the lowest levels up to the secretary to the
local government. Further, the
staff development programmes should meet
the need of
officers at all
stages in their
careers and should comprise
of both institutional
courses and various
forms of “on-the-job” training.
These programmes would
lead to significant improvement on the work
performance.
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS IN LOCAL GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
Industrial Relation is a consultative stage of the public
personnel process. It is a tripartite relationship between
employers, trade union
(workers) and the
gover nment. Labour relation centres on
the employer and
employees in the
negotiations process, while
the government provides supervisor y
role. Government’s role
in industrial relation
is to provide enabling environment for the practice of industrial relations. Industrial
relation practice requires conformity to rules and regulations. It is the responsibility of the human resources
department to manage industrial conflict at work.
MEANING OF CONFLICT
Conflict refers to
the act of
mutual interference of opposing
interests, ideas or act
of discord of
two or groups
of individuals over
issues. When there is conflict, it implies that there is a dispute. It
implies that there is a dispute, a
struggle against something by persons expressing opposing views or claims
(Ugwu, 2000: 148).
SOURCES OF CONFLICT
In the local
government system, there are several sources of conflicts. The following
are sources of
possible conflicts: demand
for regular payment of
salaries and wages,
political intrigues on
revenue allocation, intra-local
government crisis, and management
and labour relations crisis.
IRREGULAR PAYMENT OF SALARIES AND WAGES
In the local
government system as
in most organization,
human groupings make up all work activities. Local government workers often demand for
improved conditions of
services. They often
complain of
poor salaries and
wages, while the
management of local
government councils could not
meet up with these
demands. This often results in conflict resulting in
strikes by workers.
INTRA-ORGANIZATIONAL CONFLICT
Conflicts can also
arise between councilors and the
chairmen of local government . Causes of
these conflicts may be as a result of favouritism or marginalization in
decision-making, inequity remuneration
of
political
office holders. Conflict
may also arise
as a result
of unhealthy rivalry or power tussle over implementation of
some policies and programmes.
LACK OF GRIEVANCE PROCEDURES
In local government
system, grievances among
individuals cannot be under-estimated. In
management – labour
relations, lack of communication over issues and absence of effective organization
frame works to
handle grievances bring
about conflicts. Once
there is no trust and information is
often distorted, there is bound to be conflict.
POLITICALLY- MOTIVATED CONFLICT
There is often the problem of allocation of fund between
state and local government
councils. Sometimes, fund allocate d
to local government councils are
diverted by state
government to other
projects or not
released to the
councils concerned, especially
if the council
is controlled by opposition
political party. This
action often leave
the councils with poor
financial based leading to conflicts. Sometimes, the Federal government
can also withhold
funds meant to
local government
councils for political
reasons as was
witnessed between the federal
government and Lagos
states government during Obasanjo’s regime (2003 –
2007).
MANAGEMENT – LABOUR REL ATED CONFLICT
Conflicts can arise
if the collective
interests of the
workers are neglected. Certain
issues that affect
the career of
local government workers
could bring about conflicts. Issues such as lack of promotion, poor remuneration
and conditions of
service could trigger
conflicts between the local government union and local government
councils.
ROLE CONFLICT
Structural weakness by not specifying the role of various
political office holders on
one hand and that of
the career office holders on the other could trig ger off
conflicts.
CONSTITUTIONALLY – RELATED CONFLICT
The Constitution
of 1999
has abnormalities in
its provisions on
local government
councils. The provisions
in the constitution
could not make clear
whether it is the
National Assembly that
is to create local government councils or
the State House of Assembly. This has brought about conflict
between Lagos State
government and the
Federal Government over creation
of additional local
government council, leading
to non-release of funds meant for local government councils.
Moreover, the constitution
has failed to
streamline the role
of accounting
officer in the local g overnment.
Finally, the state government s have
overwhelming powers over
local governments and
this often lead to dissolution of councils by state
governor at will.
MACHINERY FOR MANAGING
CONFLICT IN LOCAL
GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
It is the responsibility of the personnel management
department to establish the machinery for negotiation and
joint consultancy. This
would involve setting
up a good
communication system between management and the representatives of
organized labour.
At the National
level, Nigerian Labour
Congress (NLC) for
junior staff and
Trade Union
Congress (TUC) for senior staff , Employers’ Association and Government consult on wages and
salaries of workers. However,
negotiation often takes place
between National Union of Local Government
Employees,( NULGE),
Employers’ Association and
Government for service to be in parity with that of civil service. Issues of a general character affecting the whole
service are dealt with in the Unified Negotiating Machinery. This machinery is used for
negotiation and consultation.
At the shop floor, the
consultation and communication that follow are the responsibilities of the Head of Personnel management
Department at the local
government level and National Union of
Local Government Employees
(NULGE) official in
each local unit.
Prior to meeting the personnel
manager, NULGE officials
summon all staff
of local government meetings intermittently
to appraise the policies or decisions as they affect their welfare.
CONFLICT RESOLUTION OR MANAGEMENT TECHNIQUES
Individual grievances
Collective grievance machinery
INDIVIDUAL GRIEVANCES PROCEDURE
Any officer who is
dissatisfied or aggrieved
as a result
of any decision of the Junior
Staff Management Committee shall have the right of appeal. Appeals against the decisions of the Junior
Staff Management Committee shall lie in the fir st instance to the chairman of
the local government. Such petitions shall be
forwarded by the officer through the Head of Personnel Manangement Department
together with briefs,
minutes and comments
of the relevant
Junior Staff Management
Committee’s meeting as well as comments
of Head of Personnel Management within two
weeks of receipt.
The decision of the
chairman on the
petition shall be communicated to the
officer concerned within two weeks of the receipt of the petitions.
Appeals against
the decision of
the chairman shall
lie to the
Local Government Service Commission. All such petitions to the commission,
together with meeting of the Junior Staff Management Committee, the
comments of the
Head of the
Department of Personnel Management, as well as
the chairman’ s decision and whatever other comments the chairman may wish
to make on the petition within two
weeks of receipt. And advance
copy of the petition
shall be sent by the petitioner to the commission. The decision of the commission on such
petitions shall be binding on all concerned.
COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
Local government and labour
often embark on collective bargaining to address collective
issues affecting the
workers. The National Association of
Local Government employees(NULGE) often engage
the local
government councils t o
negotiate on issues
that could lead
to conflict .
JOINT CONSULTATIVE COMMITTEE
Usually
committees are set
up comprising all
opinion leaders and experts to exchange
ideas, informat ion and make
suggestions for the .mutual interest
of management and
the workers. Joint
Consultative
Committee could be
set up to
negotiate on issues
concerning staff general
welfare, staff hours of work, programmes and projects and so on.
Such consultation should be regular to bridge communication gap that
could result to conflict .
In other words, issues of a general character affecting This
machinery the whole service
are dealt in established Unified
Negotiating Machinery. is used for
negotiation and consultation. Disagreement arising
out of the negotiation can
be referred to the Minister
of Labour and
Productivity, who appoints
a Conciliator. If no agreement is reached,
the minister will refer
the dispute to Industrial Arbitration Panel (AIP) and
finally to National Industrial Court
(NIC). NIC is the final authority for
settling such trade disputes.
INTER-GOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
THEORIES AND IDEOLOGY OF FEDERALISM
Federalism is a
device for dividing
decisions and
functions of government. It
contrasts with unitary
system where there
is one predominant central
government that assumes
full power and responsibility for
all government functions
but may delegate
some of its powers
to the local
authority. Federalism is
different form political and fiscal.
Whereas, political federalism
deals with the
allocation, usually
through the instrumentality of the constitution, of powers and authority to
tiers of government,
fiscal federalism, on
the other hand, is essentially
about the
allocation of government
spending and resource to
tiers of government
(Oates, 1972: 16
– 20; Asobie, 1998:15).
THEORETICAL
PERSPECTIVES OF DECENTRALIZATION
It is helpful
at this point
to examine some
of the theoretical perspectives that
have been used
by experts in
the field to
analyze explain and predict
inter-governmental events. However,
it will be helpful to define what
is meant by theory. A theory is a coherent set of statements describing
and explaining the
relationships and underlying principles of
some aspect of the world.
A useful (although
somewhat oversimplified
distinction may be made between
two kinds of
theory:
normative
theory, which offers
explanations and predictions
for how some
part of the world actually is or ought to be. And empirical
theory, which offers
explanations and predictions
for how some part of the
world, actually is or will
be. These two types
are directed at quite
different goals. However
in the field
of intergovernmental
relations efforts to
explain an inter-governmental system
are simultaneously bound up with attempts
to persuade others that certain forms of
intergovernmental relations are preferable.
In other words,
many intergovernmental theories
have been both normative and empirical.
FEDERALIST
SCHOOL
Moreover, federalism is
seen either as
alliance or decentralization (Gibson, 2004:
4 – 6).
The Alliance or
federalist school argues
that federalism
allows for the
surrender of power
to the centre
and gives allowance for
self-government. In other
words, inherent in
the federal armament is
generalized rule and particularistic rule. Federalist school is concerned
with the combination
of “ self-rule and
shared rule”. The logic is that a
process of “defederation” begins when the centre
gets so powerful to
the extent that
it erodes the
powers of the
other component units of
the federation to
run its own
affairs within the constitutionally quarantined
him it, without
reference to the
central authority. This types of federation is seen as alliance.
DECENTRALIZATION
SCHOOL
Decentralization
school view federalism
as entailing power
devolution to different geographical levels within a nation. This
school argues that mere decentralization of
power is more
important to whether
it is a “particular political
or constitutional order”.
Thus, federalism allows for a
great degree of
decentralization. The logical
is that political exigencies might
make federalism desirable but
power calculation and domination may
make decentralization the
empirical reality of
powers organization.
Two major schools
of thought discussed above view federalism in
two perspectives. The
first school, the federalist school is
concerned with the principle of
self-rule and shared rule”. The
school views federalism
as an alliance.
On the other
hand, decentralization school argues
that federalism entails power devolution to different
geographical levels within
a nation. However,
in practice federalism is
a mixture of
centralization and decentralization. Every nation embraces
a creative proportionality of
centralization and popular of
the ideological arguments in
favour of federalism. Freedom is the
right to make
rules as one
chooses. Rules in
turn impose constraints on
all those who
would not by
preference have made exactly those
rules. The ideal
of freedom is
then to minimize
the external costs suffered by
some persons in
the society. In
aristocratic society one
minimizes the external
costs of the
well – born; but
in the equalitarian society
of today, presumably
one minimizes the
external costs of some
representative citizen’s chosen
at random from
the whole. The best
way to minimize
costs for such
a citizen is
to have policing
made by the largest relevant unit of government. For all issues of national
concern, then, maximum, freedom is
attained when policy is made
nationally. Conversely, for
all issues of
local concern, maximum freedom
is attained when policy
is made locally.
So the claim by
ideologists of federalism
that the system strengthens freedom is thus false. Indeed
federalism weakens freedom.
Federalism
allows for the
surrender of power
to the centre
while allowing
self-governments. Given human
nature, power serves
as instrument of state
craft. Those with
power allow different
centres of power to
perform certain responsibilities in
order to accommodate heterogeneous nature
of the state.
Inherent of such
constitutional arrangement is to make way for nation-building.
Beyond the potentials
for managing diversities and
conflictual relations,
there is also an economic
imperative of federalism. This
calls for the decentralization of
decisions-making and the
distribution of state powers
between governmental levels.
Necessitating this is the different nature
of public goods,
which warrants the
handling of their production and
distribution in multidimensional ways.
A concurrence to
the conceptualization and
theories is the
idea of federalism as
a national polity
with dual or
multiple level of government, exercising
exclusive authority over
constitutionally determined
policy areas, but in
which only one
level of government
– the central
government is sovereign
before international communities (Gibson, 2004).
In general, therefore
in any federal
system, but especially
in asymmetrical
ones, like Nigeria
or United States,
federalism weakens freedoms.
So, the
claim of the ideologists of federalism that the
system
strengthens
freedom is thus
false. Indeed, federalism
weakens freedom, as in the
case of Local
government administration in Nigeria, where they lack autonomy.
MODELS
OF FEDERALISM AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT RELATIONS
In
inter-government relations,
it is important we
examine how a group of states
are bound into
a larger, non-centralized and
superior state. The inter-governmental relations
may be classified
into three
conceptual
models. We can
formulate some simplified
models of authority relationships among national, state and
local jurisdiction.
There are three models that express visually the three generic types
of authority
relationship that can
exist between political entities namely: coordinate – Authority
model; inclusive authority model. (Wright 1985:
58 – 65) and overlapping –
Authority model. Each
model concentrates on the essential
features of a
possible Intergovernmental Relation arrangement and
guides us in
formulating hypotheses. Testing
these hypotheses we can
discover which model
best fits the
political system being operated (Wright, 1985:59):
THE COORDINATE – AUTHORITY MODEL
In the coordinate-authority model
of Intergovernmental Relation, sharp, distinct boundaries separate the
national government and state governments. Local
units, however, are
included within and
are dependent on state governments. The most
classic expression of
state/local relations is
Dillon’s Rule, which summarizes
the power relationship between the states and
their localities quoted in (Otole, 1985:58):
1. There is no
common-law right of local self-government.
2. Local entities
are creatures of
the state subject
to creation and abolition at
the unfettered discretion
of the state
(barring constitutional limitations)
3. Localities may
exercise only those power expressly granted.
4. Localities are
“mere tenants at the will of the legislature.
This, coordinate –
authority model, therefore,
implies that the
two types of entities are independent
and autonomous. They are linked only
tangentially.
However, when the
respective spheres of action
put the national
government and the state in conflict, they ceased to be tangential and clashed directly. In such case,
the Supreme Court
becomes the arbiter
of national/state relations.
THE INCLUSIVE – AUTHORITY MODEL
Two strategies are possible. One, reduce the
various powers of
either the states
or localities or
both; or Two, enlarge
the national government’ s circle
with or without enlarging the state and/or
local circles. Both strategies can
be understood by
means of game
theory: a systematic
way of studying behavior in decision making situations. The theory
assumes that all
participants strive to
optimize their
behaviour – each
trying to maximize
gains and minimize losses within the limits
of allowed behavior
(hence the analogy
with games). The outcome is
seen to depend
not only on
the behavior of
any one participant
but on the responses of other participants as well. In the
first strategy, is the classic
case of a
three – person, zero – sum game? The sum of the
player’s winnings equals the sum of
their losing. An illustration of
this in the Intergovernmental Relation
contexts is the usury case in USA and the legislation requiring state and local
units to meet minimum
wage and maximum
hour requirements. The
national government
attempted to exercise
(expand) its power at the expense
of state/local
powers. The gain
in national power
equaled the power
or discretion lost by
state and local
units. Thus, the
national gains equaled
state/local losses.
In game theory,
the second strategy
is called a
“non-constant - sum game. All
participants in this
type of game
can “win” or
make gains. Perhaps the
best Intergovernmental Relation
illustration of the second strategy is
fiscal: the conditional
grant – in
– aid. The
national sector can expand
by raising more
money to offer
and grants to
states and local governments.
The funds can be offered
with conditions (“losses”) imposed on the
recipients. But the benefits
(winnings) are so attractive that they
appear to outweigh
the attached constraints.
From these examples of
the two strategies,
we would expect
national Intergovernmental
Relation policies to
lean far more
toward the strategy –
such as grants
in aid. The
strategy assume that
the total resources
(“winnings”) can be expanded.
However, the inclusive
– authority model
serves other uses
besides allowing
predictions of Intergovernmental Relation
policies. The model also conveys
the essential hierarchical
nature of authority.
The dependency
relationships imply powers
patterns that are
similar to Dillon’s rule
for state/local relations.
That is, states
and localities would be
mere minions of the national
government with insignificant or incidental
impact on American
politics and public
policy. To the question of who
governs, this model provides an unequivocal answer – the national government.
THE
OVERLAPPING – AUTHORITY MODEL
The
overlapping – Authority
Model of Intergovernmental Relation comes from
the early 1970s
and from efforts
by the Nixon administration to
innovate and decentralized
decision – Making
in categorical grant – in – aid programmes (Wright, 1985:59):
The overlay among the circles conveys three characteristics features of the
model:
1. Substantial areas
of governmental operations
involves national,
state and local units (or officials) simultaneously;
2. The areas
of autonomy or
single-jurisdiction independence
and full
discretion are comparatively small;
3. The power and
influence available to anyone
jurisdiction (or official)
is
substantially limited. The
limits produce an
authority pattern best
described as bargaining.
Bargaining is used in common dictionary sense of
“negotiating the terms of a sale, exchange,
or agreement”. In
the Intergovernmental Relation
context, sale is far
less relevant than
exchange or agreement.
For example, the national government offers more than 1000 assistance programmes to
states and localities in
exchange for their
agreement to implement
a programme; carryout
a project, or pursue
anyone of a wide variety of activities. Of-course, as part of
the bargain, the
recipient of assistance
must usually agree
to conditions, such as;
the providing of
matching funds and
the satisfaction of accounting, reporting,
auditing and performance requirements.
In sum, the chief characteristics of the overlapping –
authority models are:
Limited, dispersed power,
Interdependence,
Limited areas of autonomy,
Bargaining – exchange relationships,
Cooperation and competition,
Also, contacts and exchanges
between national, state,
and local officials
may be cooperative or
competitive; the determining
factors include: the
policy issue or problem,
the status of the officials,
the partisan leanings
of participants, and
the constituency being represented.
FISCAL
RELATIONS AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT
In most federal
countries, there exists a strong centre, while preserving the diversity reflected in
individual states. In Nigeria,
federal and state governments exist
side by side,
with each possessing certain
assigned functions. In federal
systems, devolution of
power between the central
and component units is
to design issues
that concern the
federal and others of
common interest. Presently,
Nigeria is highly
centralized as the central
government had enormous
powers conferred on
it by section 4,
sub-section 5 of
1999 constitution. By
this, the federal government is
constitutionally granted two
sets of legislative powers, namely: those
contained in the
exclusive list and
those contained in the concurrent
list. Besides, laws made by
states can be overridden by federal laws
of there is
conflict. The federal
government exercises statutory
responsibility creation of new local governments.
FEDERAL
- STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT RELATIONS
Finance is the
most critical policy
issues in intergovernmental fiscal relations. The
issues concerning fiscal
relations among the constitutional units
of the Nigerian
federation that remain
mostly unresolved are the
divergence between assigned
functions and tax powers; the
principle of horizontal
and vertical
revenue allocation; dependence of
state and local
governments on the
federal sources of funding; the
tendency towards concentration
and federal presence
in the state (Mbanefo, 1998).
As the federal
– state and
local governments have
powers under the concurrent list
on collection of
taxes, there were
overlaps in tax
and levy collection by
various tiers of
government necessitating a new schedule
of taxes being published for all tiers of government.
MECHANISM FOR
MANAGING FEDERAL STATE
AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT RELATIONS
However,
under the federal
system, a number
of administrative mechanisms are
often devised to manage intergovernmental relations. In Nigeria, a
number of meetings
and conferences with
administrative standing
committees, constitutional boards,
council or commissions have been
associated with federal,
state, local or
interstate constitutions (Eneanya, 2009: 255).
With the emergence
of democratic governance,
since 1979, management of
inter-governmental relations has
followed these dimensions
(Eneanya, 2009: 256 – 7):
i. The use
of national economic
council and national
council of states;
ii. Crucial
role of courts in resolving inter-governmental disputes of supreme court
ruling mollifying the
revenue allocation act of 1981 and
the dispute at
the supreme court
between the Lagos State government
and the federal
government over creation
of new local council.
iii. The role
of national and
state assemblies in
their inter-governmental relations,
example, the assembly
of speakers and the position of
the national assembly
in resolving federal – state–
local governments revenue sharing formula;
iv. The impact of political parties’ competition in the management of inter-governmental relations.
Elected officials of
various parties now
align to resolve inter-governmental conflicts.
v. The reactions
of citizens to
the activities of
public officials who operate at
different levels of
government, especially the
support given to officials on inter-governmental conflicts.
All these conferences
and meetings were
aimed at managing
inter-governmental relations in order to minimize areas of conflict.
STATE -
LOCAL GOVENRMENT RELATIONS
State – local
government relations may
not necessarily be a constitutional matter
in a federal
system, yet such
relations may provide the
evidence of a
working federalism.
ADMINISTRATIVE
RELATIONSHIPS
State – local
government relations may
not be a
constitutional matter in a
federal system. Over the years
before 1976, local
government units
have treated part
of state governments.
State governments
created by by-laws a nd have effective control on their
administration. However,
the nationwide local
government reform of
1976 brought local government
units into constitutional, especially
with the
entrenchment of the
functions of local
government functions entrenched
in the
fourth schedule of 1979 modified significantly state –
local government relations.
This is significant
because the local
government units were
assigned role to play
in management of
primary school education
and primary Healthcare services.
These roles created
forum for the
state and local govnemnt interact
as they are
beneficiaries of revenue
allocation. This constitutional
provision in Nigeria helped to
establish a formal
role for the
federal government in local government affairs.
A formal state
– local government
relations was now
created in the process, as state – local government joint account became inevitable to share revenue
allocated to local councils from
federal account. When it was even
realized that state
governments were “short
– changing” the local government
units from the
state – local
government units’ joint accounts, the
national assembly approved
an executive bill
to enable the federal government
allocated revenue directly
to the local
council units. It was
even attached with
a clause that
should a state government short-change
a local government
on funds allocated
to them, such state
government would be
surcharge with equivalent amount the
council was short
changed. As expected,
many state governments
protested on this, and called for its abrogation.
However, these provisions
for the functions
of local government
units are encouraging political
developments they are
yet to be
resolved as constitutional accepted
state – local
government relations. In
spite of this,
it is an evidence of a working federalism.
FISCAL
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN STATE
AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
Financial
relationships also exist
between the states
and local governments. The
annual budgets of
local government require
the approval of the
state government before
they can be executed.
In fact,
the state government
sets out guidelines
for the preparation
of such annual
budgets. Expenditures above certain limits required approval. Moreover,
local government autonomy is not absolute. The third tier
of government retains
functional and fiscal relations with the higher tiers of
government. The state government relates
with local governments as follows:
i. Allocate 10%
of its internally
generated revenue to
the local
governments within the state;
ii. Enact through
the state House
of Assembly, a
law providing for the structure
composition, revenue, expenditure
and other matters, such
as staffing meetings
and other relevant
matters provided such laws
are not in
conflict with the
constitution or any
existing federal legislation.
iii. Establish a
joint planning Board,
through a law
enacted by the state House
of Assembly; to
require each local
government within
the state to
participate in the
economic planning and development of the local
government area.
iv. Establish the
office of the
state auditor –
general for local governments for
enhanced public probity
and accountability at the local
government level through
the regular auditing
of the
accounts of all the local governments within the state;
v. Offer advice,
assistance and guidance
(but not control),
as and when
necessary, to local governments in the state.
For further reading:
Ugoh, S.
C. (2011). Understanding
Inter-governmental Relations in
Nigeria. Lagos: Sam Iroanusi Publications.
Eneanya, A. N. (2012).
Policy Research Analysis and Effective Policy- Making. Lagos: University of
Lagos Press Ltd.
Eneanya, A.N.
(2012). Local Government Administration in Nigeria: A Comparative Perspective.
Lagos: University of Lagos Press.
Ola, R.F. (1984).
Local Government in Nigeria. London: Kegan Paul International
Oni, E.O. (1999).
An introduction to Local Government Administration in Nigeria. Ibadan: Ejon
Publishers
Gboyega, A.
(1987). Political Values and Local Government. Lagos: Malthouse Press.
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