Thomas Masud Musah Ayaaba told assembly members that Atebubu-Amantin needs more money for development projects. The municipal chief executive wants everyone to work together and collect more cash from local residents. He spoke during the first ordinary assembly meeting of the year at Atebubu. Ayaaba said his team will train revenue collectors to do their jobs better. The municipality also plans a big campaign to make people pay their bills.
Armed robbery cases dropped thanks to teamwork between local and national government officials. Small theft crimes still cause trouble for some neighborhoods around the area. The MCE said security remains a top concern for his administration. Police and assembly workers continue fighting crime problems across different communities. Better cooperation helps keep dangerous criminals away from honest citizens.
Assembly coffers held over three million cedis as of May 31st this year. The total represents about 21 percent of their yearly money goal. Ayaaba feels confident his team will reach 100 percent of their target before December ends. The municipality wants to collect almost 16 million cedis from all sources. More cash means better services for residents and stronger development programs.
Education eats up 37 percent of all municipal spending according to the chief executive. Classroom furniture shortages and broken infrastructure hurt local schools badly. Assembly leaders promise to fix these problems with special funding from the District Assembly Common Fund. Students deserve proper desks and well-maintained buildings for learning. The municipality treats education as its biggest investment priority for community growth.
Armed robbery cases dropped thanks to teamwork between local and national government officials. Small theft crimes still cause trouble for some neighborhoods around the area. The MCE said security remains a top concern for his administration. Police and assembly workers continue fighting crime problems across different communities. Better cooperation helps keep dangerous criminals away from honest citizens.
Assembly coffers held over three million cedis as of May 31st this year. The total represents about 21 percent of their yearly money goal. Ayaaba feels confident his team will reach 100 percent of their target before December ends. The municipality wants to collect almost 16 million cedis from all sources. More cash means better services for residents and stronger development programs.
Education eats up 37 percent of all municipal spending according to the chief executive. Classroom furniture shortages and broken infrastructure hurt local schools badly. Assembly leaders promise to fix these problems with special funding from the District Assembly Common Fund. Students deserve proper desks and well-maintained buildings for learning. The municipality treats education as its biggest investment priority for community growth.