The Money Is Moving—But Is Your Life Changing?
Something historic happened in Nigeria—and many people didn’t even notice.
In July 2024, the Supreme Court made a bold decision: Local Government Areas (LGAs) must receive their allocations directly. No more passing through state governments. No more bottlenecks.
By January 2026, it became reality.
Today, money flows straight from Abuja into your LGA account every single month—sometimes as much as ₦200 million to ₦280 million.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth:
Most communities still look the same.
The roads are still broken.
Primary health centers are still struggling.
Youth unemployment is still rising.
So the question is no longer “Is money coming?”
It is now: “Where is the money going?”
- A System That Finally Changed
For years, LGAs operated like extensions of state governments.
Funds meant for your community were first controlled at the state level. Salaries were paid, yes—but development? That often came last… or never.
Chairmen had titles, but little power.
Now, that has changed.
Money is sent directly to each LGA.
Chairmen now control their budgets.
They can plan projects, award contracts, and act—without waiting.
This reform was supposed to bring government closer to you.
But has it? - The Kind of Money We’re Talking About
Let’s make this real.
In Kwara State alone, monthly allocations in early 2026 looked like this:
Ilorin West — ₦276M
Ilorin East — ₦241M
Asa — ₦198M
Offa — ₦203M
Edu — ₦224M
Baruten — ₦251M
That’s billions of naira every year flowing into local governments.
Money that could:
Fix abandoned health centers
Repair dangerous roads
Support struggling small businesses
Create jobs for young people
This isn’t small money.
This is life-changing money—if used properly. - Why It Still Feels Like Nothing Has Changed
If the money is real, why isn’t the impact?
Three hard truths:
Debt is quietly eating the funds
Many LGAs owe banks and contractors. Before the money even arrives, deductions are made. What’s left is sometimes just a fraction.
Some LGAs are not ready for this power
Managing hundreds of millions requires planning, expertise, and discipline. Not every LGA has that capacity yet.
Silence from citizens
This may be the biggest issue.
When nobody asks questions, anything can happen.
Projects can exist only on paper.
Budgets can be padded.
Funds can disappear quietly. - You Don’t Need Power to Demand Accountability
You don’t need to be in government to ask questions.
You don’t need connections.
You don’t even need money.
You just need your phone—and the willingness to care.
Here’s how to start:
Check the numbers
FAAC releases monthly allocation figures. A simple search shows how much your LGA received.
Ask for the budget
This is your right. Visit your LGA secretariat or contact your ward councilor.
Follow the projects
If millions were approved for boreholes or roads—go and see them. Are they real? Are they complete?
Use the law
The Freedom of Information Act gives you the right to request details. Public offices are expected to respond. - Why This Moment Matters More Than You Think
Nigeria is heading toward another election cycle.
But this time, something is different.
LGAs now control real money.
Real influence.
Real power.
That means what happens at the local level will shape everything—from grassroots politics to national outcomes.
If citizens stay silent, nothing changes.
If citizens pay attention, everything changes. - What You Can Do—Starting Today
Don’t wait for activists or journalists.
Start small:
Find your ward councilor and save their contact
Ask one simple question: “What projects has our LGA approved this year?”
Share what you discover with others
Awareness spreads. Pressure builds. Change begins.
Bottom Line: The Money Is No Longer the Problem
For the first time in a long time, the excuse is gone.
The money is coming.
The system has changed.
The opportunity is here.
What’s missing is accountability.
And that doesn’t start in Abuja.
It starts with you.
Because if we don’t track it now…
2027 will come—and we’ll still be asking the same questions.
Call to Action:
Which LGA should we investigate first? Drop the name. Let’s follow the money together.
