President John Dramani Mahama,
yesterday, renewed the Government’s commitment to implement the Progressively
Free Secondary Education Programme for Senior High School (SHS) in the
2015/2016 academic year, which starts in September.
He said 367,565 students are
expected to benefit from the programme, which would abolish tuition fee for
both day and boarding students in public schools but students would pay for
boarding and feeding fees.
President Mahama said this when he
delivered State of the Nation Address to the Parliament in Accra.
He said the education sector; in the
2015 budget, received the biggest allocation with GH₵6.7 billion and that
showed the Government’s commitment of providing better education to the
citizenry.
Work on the construction of the
initial 73 Community Day SHS, he said, were on-going while that on 50 new sites
had also begun to complement the existing high schools.
President Mahama announced that work
on the University of Health and Allied Sciences in the Volta Region was in
progress with the first batch of students being admitted to start the academic
year.
He said the Government’s plan to
convert Polytechnics to Technical University was on course, while it was
considering the conversion of the University for Development Studies’ campuses
in Wa and Navrongo in the Upper West and East Regions, respectively, to full
universities.
On Social Protection, President
Mahama said the Government had introduced a card known as the “EBAN Elderly
Card”, which would enable elderly people of 65years and above to enjoy
transport services at 50 per cent discount and also to have priority access to banking
and hospital services.
He said 15,000 ‘poorest
households’ would this year be enrolled onto the Livelihood Empowerment Against
Poverty Programme, (LEAP), while 14,000 orphan caregivers would be trained to
give good care to orphans and persons with disability.
The President urged Ghanaians to
endeavour to eat what was grown locally to add value to the local produce in
order to boost Ghana’s economy.
He said according to the Bank of
Ghana, the country’s rice import bill had fallen by 41 per cent, which meant a
lot more could be done to protect the local economy by patronizing locally made
produce.
President Mahama said the revamping
of the Komenda Sugar Factory was progressing, while work on the Dipali Sugar
Factory in the Northern Region would begin this year to provide direct and
indirect employment to the growing youth of
Ghana.
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