Itamo residents say floods, broken roads, and shaky power have turned daily life into survival mode, and they are begging local and state leaders to step in before the community stalls completely.
Where the alarm came from
Where the alarm came from
- The outcry came straight from the Itamo Community in the Igirigiri area of Ado-Ekiti.
- A New Year prayer gathering doubled as a venting session.
- Frustration spilled out after years of watching conditions slide.
- Drainage barely exists, so flooding shows up fast during rain.
- Roads coming in from Lobinto Junction and through Embassy Island via Agric Olope are barely passable.
- Movement turns into a gamble whenever the weather shifts.
- Shop owners said heavy rain can shut down trading completely.
- Some people get stuck in their shops, unable to make it home.
- Businesses have folded, and families have been disrupted as a result.
- Olagoke Oluwatuyi, Henry Abas, and Veronica Egbejule took the lead.
- All three spoke as business owners living the problem daily.
- Their stories centered on loss of income and personal safety.
- The call went directly to Bosun Osaloni.
- Biodun Oyebanji was also urged to intervene.
- The tone mixed praise for past projects with urgency for action.
- Itamo was described as one of the fastest-growing parts of the city.
- Growth without infrastructure was framed as a setup for failure.
- Residents argued that development needs to catch up with the population.
- A route through Fehintoluwa Community was suggested as an alternative.
- The road could ease access to Ado Local Government Area.
- It would also link to Afe Babalola University and the Federal Polytechnic in Ado-Ekiti.
- Erratic electricity was flagged as another business killer.
- A transformer was requested to stabilize the supply.
- Improved power was framed as essential for recovery.
- Michael Opeyemi Bamidele was mentioned for support.
- Steve Olusola Fatoba was also appealed to.
- Residents framed the request as a partnership, not a confrontation.
- Confidence in current leaders was openly stated.
- Support was tied to visible action and responsiveness.
- Votes were promised, but with clear expectations attached.