Sunday, May 11, 2025

Bill seeking to increase Lagos LGAs from 20 to 57 scales second reading

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Umar Audu
Umar Audu
Umar Audu is an award winning Journalist. He holds a bachelor's degree in Mass Communication from Nasarawa State University, Keffi. Umar has extensive experience covering various beats with a developmental approach, wielding public service journalism tools and ethics to demand accountability. Before joining Daily Nigerian in 2022, he has worked with several public service institutions and broadcasters, including Radio Now and Daria Media, Lagos. Umar can be reached via umarsumxee180@gmail.com , https://www.facebook.com/meester.umxee?mibextid=ZbWKwL or @Themar_audu on X.
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tiamin rice
tiamin rice

A bill seeking to increase the number of local government areas in Lagos State from 20 to 57 has scaled second reading at the House of Representatives on Wednesday.

The bill, which was among the 42 constitutional amendment bills passed by the lawmakers, will upgrade the existing 37 Development Area Councils to full-fledged local government councils.

Being a constitutional amendment, the bill will have to be passed by the two-third of state houses of assembly.

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Upon passage into law, it will bring the total number of local governments in Nigeria to 811 from 774, with Lagos officially having the highest number of local governments in Nigeria, above Kano’s 44 and Katsina 34.

The bill, which scaled second reading during the Wednesday plenary, was sponsored by James Abiodun Faleke (Ikeja Federal Constituency), Babajimi Benson (Ikorodu Federal Constituency), and Enitan Dolapo Badru (Lagos Island I Federal Constituency), alongside 19 other lawmakers.

The billed is titled “A Bill for an Act to Alter the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended) to Accommodate the Thirty-Seven (37) Development Area Councils of Lagos State as Full-Fledged Local Government Areas, Increasing the Total Number of Local Government Areas in the Federation to Eight Hundred and Eleven (811), and for Related Matters (HB. 1498)”

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