The Choma District Development Coordinating Committee (DDCC) has rejected project proposals amounting to K350 million under the Constituency Development Fund for Choma central.
Members of the committee resolved unanimously during their meeting held in Choma yesterday not to endorse project proposals, which were submitted by various wards, because most of the applications allegedly lacked merit and sufficient information
The members further argued that most projects that were proposed were not viable to warrant allocation of public resources for their expansion.
This is the second time in less than a week that the DDCC has met and rejected the same CDF project proposals that were submitted by the planning sub-committee of the DDCC.
Chairman of the committee, who is also District Commissioner, Laiven Apuleni, said the decision of the members was binding.
Mr. Apuleni said the project proposals would be sent back to the applicants and be subjected to field appraisals to satisfy concerns raised by the DDCC.
During the meeting, it was discovered that some of the project proposals had unrealistic figures, thereby raising suspicion about their credibility.
In one instance, the community had applied for as little as K 2. 5 million for the construction of a one by three classroom block at a certain school.
But the Ministry of Education submitted to the committee that the realistic figure for the construction of a one by three classroom block in the prevailing economic situation is K180 million.
Most of the project proposals from various communities for the rehabilitation of schools and health centres had amounts that were not sufficient to reach completion stage.
The members of the DDCC resolved that they would not endorse their signatures to a project document that was not clear especially that the Constituency Development Fund was public money.
They noted that members of the Choma constituency CDF were more concerned with how to apportion the K 400 million according to their wards without considering priorities and the impact of the projects.
The DDCC members said it would be better for the CDF committee to come up with significant projects that would have an impact on the development of the district.
They noted that the piecemeal system of sharing CDF according to wards without considering developmental priorities was responsible for the non-completion of many stalled projects that are funded under the same fund.
ZANIS/CM/KSH/Ends