The House of Representatives on
Wednesday stopped the plan by the Board of the Nigerian Electricity
Regulatory Commission to pay a severance package of N2.7bn to the
Chairman of the agency, Dr. Sam Amadi, and six commissioners.
The House took the decision as it also
ordered an investigation into the abandoned 135km/330kv Omotosho-Epe-Aja
transmission line, which had left the people of Epe without electricity
supply since 2005.
A member from Bauchi State, Mr. Mohammed
Gololo, drew the attention of the House to the proposal by NERC to pay
its chairman N400m as severance package and another sum of N380m to each
of the six other members of the board.
He informed the House that the “strange”
proposal was meant to pay the affected officials salaries and other
benefits upfront for two years on exiting the agency.
Gololo stated that NERC defended the
package on the grounds that Section 36(2) of the Electric Power Sector
Reform Act barred a member of the board from working in the power sector
for a “period of two years after leaving office.”
But the House noted that the lives of
the officers were not tied to the power sector, as they could work
elsewhere after completing their assignment at NERC.
Part of the motion moved by Gololo under
matters of urgent public importance, read, “The House is aware of the
decision by NERC’s board to pay its chairman and six members a severance
package of N2.7bn, with N400m for the chairman and N380m for each of
the six members.
“The approval of the package conflicts
with the recommendations of the National Salaries, Incomes and Wages
Commission, and thus, offends Section 42(1)(a) and (b) of the Electric
Power Sector Reform Act.”
Lawmakers further observed that the
proposed package had neither been approved by the National Assembly nor
captured in the commission’s 2015 budget.
For example, they said NERC’s total
budget for capital projects in 2015 was N42.2m, while no provision was
made for recurrent expenditure.
Gololo added that the omission of
recurrent expenditure raised suspicions as to whether the commission did
not pay salaries to members of staff or “pays salaries from funds that
have not been paid into the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federation
in contravention of the 1999 Constitution.”
A member from Anambra State, Mr. Anayo
Nnebe, noted that it was the common practice in many Federal Government
agencies to allocate huge public funds for packages that could not be
defended.
Nnebe, who described the NERC proposal
as “ungodly, wicked and unbelievable,” said he could not understand how a
public official would take N400m from tax payers’ money as upfront
payment after leaving office.
Another member from Kano State, Mr.
Muhammad Wudil, an engineer, told the House that the power sector’s laws
did not make any provisions for the type of packages proposed by NERC.
The House, which was presided over by
the Speaker, Mr. Yakubu Dogara, directed its Committee on Power to
monitor and ensure that that the N2.7bn severance package was not paid
to the officials.
The motion on the Omotosho-Epe-Aja 330kv line was moved by Mr. Wale Raji.
Credit: Punch
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