By Laudia Anyorkor Nunoo, GNA
Tema, Jan. 29, GNA – Officials of the Tema West Municipal Assembly (TWMA), led by Mr Ludwig Teye Totimeh, the Municipal Chief Executive (MCE), have inspected ongoing and abandoned project sites across the municipality, assuring residents of the Assembly’s commitment to completing all stalled developments.
Mr Totimeh, accompanied by Mr James Enu, Member of Parliament (MP) for Tema West, said no electoral area would be left out of the government’s development agenda.
He emphasized that the completion of abandoned projects would significantly improve the living conditions of residents.
Among the projects visited were a Community-based Health Planning and Services (CHPS) compound with a three-bedroom staff accommodation at Adjei Kojo; drilling and mechanisation of boreholes at Baatsona, Lashibi, and Sakumono; construction of a two-storey, 12-unit classroom block with ancillary facilities at Lashibi Junior High School; traffic safety interventions across 11 electoral areas; completion of a police post at Adjei Kojo; and the completion and furnishing of a clinic at Klagon.


Mr Totimeh reaffirmed the Assembly’s resolve to complete longstanding abandoned projects—schools, police posts, and health facilities—rather than allow public investments to deteriorate.
He also appealed to individuals encroaching on land allocated for a health facility at Adjei Kojo, urging them to vacate the area to enable construction to begin.
He assured residents that all stalled educational, security, and health infrastructure projects within the constituency would be completed within a reasonable timeframe and called for community support to ensure smooth execution.
Mr Enu said the inspection formed part of efforts to monitor the progress of abandoned projects in line with President John Dramani Mahama’s directive that all stalled projects nationwide be completed before new ones are initiated.
He expressed satisfaction with plans to drill and mechanise about five boreholes in Lashibi to help address water shortages in parts of the constituency.
He further disclosed that funding had been secured to complete an abandoned school project that had stalled since 2019.
The MP also assured staff of the Klagon CHPS compound—which was completed in 2016 but has since lacked essential equipment—that the necessary logistics would be provided to enable effective service delivery to the community.
GNA
Edited by Lydia Kukua Asamoah