283,003 Lagos Residents To Receive N25,000 Each From FG

Advertisements

Not less than 283,003 Lagos residents are to receive N25,000 each from the Federal Government under it conditional cash transfer scheme.

The National Programme Manager of the National Cash Transfer Office (NCTO) in Abuja, Dr. Michael Ajuluchuku, explained on Tuesday during a one-day training in Lagos that the initiative is designed to offer financial relief to vulnerable citizens in the state. 

According to Ajuluchuku, the step-down training is structured to prepare facilitators for enrolling the 283,003 beneficiaries in the state. 

He demanded payment from the facilitators for ensuring a rapid enrollment of beneficiaries, completing the circle according to the initial plan. 

He mentioned that the project will prioritize households in both rural and urban areas, specifically targeting those classified as poor and vulnerable across the country. 

Advertisements

“The design of the scale of NASSP-SU intervention has two components, Shock Responsive Social Protection (Urban), and Shock Responsive Social Protection, (Rural) that is aimed at providing N25,000 for three months to beneficiaries amounting to N75,000,” he said. 

Speaking about the selection process, Ajuluchuku highlighted the National Social Safety Net Project’s two program-implementing units. The National Social Safety Net Coordinating Office is specifically tasked with gathering data on the poor and vulnerable across the country. 

“Basically, their mandate is to generate data of the poor and the vulnerable. 

“The second programme implementation unit is the National Cash Transfer Office, which is mainly responsible for delivering the intervention. 

“To us at NCTO, we mine these two data of the poor and vulnerable from the National Safety Net Coordinating Office. “The criteria are that the beneficiaries must be poor and vulnerable and must fall between the poverty line as established by the Federal Government so that is how these data is gotten for intervention,” he said.  

Advertisements