The National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools has said
that it paid over N200 million annually to the Abia Government which may
not be getting to government treasury. The Abia Chapter Chairman, Mr Okey Ufomba, made the disclosure in an
interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Aba on Friday. “The private schools sector has always been very supportive.
‘’By way of revenue, we generate over N200 million for Abia annually
but our worry is: does this money get to government coffers?
“Does it get to them? This is my worry. Our worry is that most of this revenue we pay does not get to Abia state government.
“Now we are working with the Abia State House of Assembly to check
this. They are trying but they need information to work,” he said.
Ufomba said that by furnishing the state House of Assembly with more
information on their transactions with revenue agents, the government
could improve the state’s revenue.
“We want to see how they can guide the Board of Internal Revenue and
other revenue agents to reduce the amount of money we pay to what we can
afford.
“We also want them to define a proper channel for us to be paying the
money to the government so that the government can get money to work
with. “We are very prepared to work with the governor and the government,” he said.
He noted that the members of the association paid for over 40 revenue
items to government agents which resulted in each member paying more
than N450, 000 annually.
Ufomba listed some of the items as Infrastructure levy (N50,000 –
N200,000), Fire Extinguisher (N25,000-45,000), Advert fee (N5,000 –
N50,000), Borehole (N7,500 – N25,000) and Consumer Protection Council
fee (N10,000 – N20,000). Others are ASEPA Bucket (N2,500 – N10,000), Environmental levy (N10,
000 – N24,000), Operational Permit (N5,000 -N10,000), Business Premises
(N5,000 -N10,000) and Ministry of Education annual renewal fee (N20,000 –
N80, 000).
He said that the rates differed from one school to another depending
on the presence or absence of Nursery, Primary and Secondary schools in
the complex.
The chairman stressed the need for the government to stop taxing the
proprietors of private schools indiscriminately if it wanted them to
remain in business and support the education sector.
“The government should have pity on us because if they continue like
this, we will not remain in business for long and the people in the
state will suffer for it,” he said.
Source: (NAN).
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