A’Ibom govt to start paying verified workers N80,000

Eno dissolves exco, praises it for performance

Ini Billie, Uyo

A total of 45,984 Akwa Ibom workers in the State Civil Service have been verified to receive N80,000 minimum wage.

Akwa Ibom State Governor, Dr Umo Eno, authorized the commencement of the payment of the N80,000 new minimum wage to the verified public service workers.

Speaking on Tuesday in Uyo after receiving the report from the Committee on the Implementation of the New Minimum Wage/Personnel Verification headed by the Head of Service, Mr Effiong Essien, Governor Eno praised the committee for the work and requested that the exercise be extended to the retired workers Pension Schemes.

According to Mr Ekerete Udoh, Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, the N80,000 payment which will begin by the end of January will be backdated to November last year.

“Let me thank the committee for taking the time to deliver on this assignment. As I receive this report today, my understanding is that before now, we had a staff strength of 55,120.

“Out of that, 52,177 persons turned out for the verification exercise, so we still have an outstanding of 2,943 personnel who did not show up while 6,193 have issues with their verification.

“Having received this report today, I will be signing this off to the Office of the Accountant General, Auditor General, and the Director of Budget to come up with the memo that they are ready to implement.

“For those who have been cleared—about 45,984 of them, we should be ready to pay the minimum wage at the end of this month, effective from November 1, 2024.

“The Civil Service forms a critical mass of employees in our state government. Since we came on board, their welfare has remained a key priority, and we will continue to do so.

“I believe this will help ameliorate the harsh economic environment we have found ourselves in, and I hope, by the grace of God, slowly, we will find our way out of it very soon.

“For the people who are yet to be verified, we will give another 30 days. After that, we will end the exercise. If they don’t show up within the time specified, we will take it that they are not civil servants, and their salaries will be stopped.

“We want to extend our hand of fellowship to the organized labour in the state and ask them to work with the government, as we all have a responsibility to Akwa Ibom State. We have done a lot to engender good government-labour relations. Since we came on board, we have paid over 47 billion in gratuities from the over 97 billion backlog we met since 2012, as well as several palliatives to the workers and people of Akwa Ibom State,” the governor stated.

While accepting the recommendation of the Committee that the verification exercise should be done on a yearly basis, Eno said, “I have received your recommendation that this exercise should be done on a yearly basis, and I think we will do so.

“Another area we will run verification is the pension payments. If what we uncovered can happen with serving personnel, then you can imagine what may be happening where people have unfortunately passed and are still being paid.

“We need to quickly carry out the verification exercise in that area too. So, I am not dissolving the Committee now; we will extend the life of the Committee for another month,” he explained.

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