In
his desire to ensure that critical economic bills pending before the
Senate get necessary technical input from industry players to make for
efficiency and effectiveness when passed,
Senate President, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki, on Friday inaugurated a
Joint Technical Committee on the Transport Sector Reform Bills.
Saraki who said the Senate has made the
passage of the various transport sector infrastructure
bills, a critical aspect of its legislative
agenda, according to a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Sanni Onogu, listed the affected Transport reform bills to include: The
Railway Bill - to reform the rail systems;
the Ports and Harbour Bill
- for the efficient running of the ports;
and the National Transport Commission Bill - to
serve as the sector's regulatory body.
Others are the
National Inland Waterways Bill - to develop the inland waterways transport system; the
Federal Roads Fund Bill - to ensure
efficient maintenance of the federal
road network; and the Federal Roads Authority Bill - to
manage the nation's federal roads.
Saraki said raising the committee of experts became necessary to use their technical
knowledge to enrich and assist the
work of the various Senate Committees
to ensure that there is regulatory alignment across the entire regulatory arrangements in
the transport sector.
Saraki said: "Your work therefore, is to ensure the
integrity of the entire system, the efficiency
and legal integrity of the various transport bills enumer ated
above to enable the Senate reduce areas of conflict, inefficiency,
unnecessary regulatory burden and ensure the achievement of the overarching
objective of reducing cost of doing business and increasing the ease of doing business for our SMEs.
"Your work today, is very critical and will help ensure that
our decisions on these bills are grounded in knowledge and field experience vital for the success of the
objectives of the laws as these bills will not only serve this generation effectively but many more generations
to come," he said.
He noted that the
8th National Assembly is
not unaware of the cry of Nigerians over the issue of bad roads,
inefficient rails, sloppy port operations and dropping efficiency levels
in the aviation industry.
"Like you, we want
to see the day when we shall no longer hear that our people spend endless man-hours stuck
in traffic; weeks on end clearing simple goods from the port and the attendant rise in cost
of doing business due to these challenges.
"While we are, indeed, in
a hurry to ensure we deliver on our promise to our people to pass all our economic reform bills,
this 8th Senate
is determined to also ensure
that they actually meet our needs not just for today but for generations yet unborn.
"We want to ensure that these
exercise is able to cut by a half, our
World Bank ease of doing business ranking. In
a nutshell, it is important to
us that we get it right and
your invaluable contributions will be most helpful," Saraki said.
He noted that the Bills when passed would help the country modernize
and expand its transport
sector infrastructure.
He said that already there is the
National Assembly Business Environment Roundtable (NASSBER) report which
suggests that the bills alone can help add 87,000 new jobs
annually for the next five years, with
an income growth average of 7 percent.
Saraki added: "This is our aim, to see
more jobs added
to get our people out of the streets and occupied and opportunity to see
our economy diversify and recover from recession. But
this will only happen if these bills are well and carefully synchronized to
deliver especially in the regulatory framework
we have adopted.
"This Senate is on
the same page with the Executive on this. The task we have set for ourselves has never been done before.
We are however, not overawed by it.
"Rather, we have embraced it as the necessary challenge and needed sacrifice to make for us to achieve a secure
Nigerian economy for tomorrow. We have set out to
comprehensively reform our entire market framework to entrench
efficiency, accountability, independence and market orientation across
our economic base.
"This is especially so with the infrastructure
market architecture with our adoption of the intermodal
transport sector scheme. This is where the work of this committee is most critical," he said.
Responding on behalf of the other members of the Joint Technical Committee, a former Chairman
of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and chairman
of the committee, Dr. Sam Amadi, thanked the Senate President and his
colleagues for the quality leadership they have been providing to the
country.
He
described the Joint Technical Committee as an innovative approach in
lawmaking that has brought experts from the business community and
the academia together to examine proposed institutional and regulatory
frameworks to enable the legislators make the best laws possible for
the country. .
"We
appreciate these innovation and we are already seeing how it is
improving the quality of lawmaking. Our task is simple sir, to make
sure that the Bills are right...we will do our best to deliver on our
assignment," Amadi said.
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