Wednesday, March 6, 2013

This is the currently happening in Liberia.
Our intention is to see how we can work to get rid of some of these problems.

The crux of the dilemma was highlighted in a January 21, 2013 letter obtained by FrontPageAfrica in which the embattled Montserrado County Superintendent Grace Kpaan wrote the speaker of the House Alex Tyler expressing her willingness to carry out the House’s mandate to proceed with the payment of fees to school for the Montserrado County Scholarship Program but issuing caution that the process lacked a proper vetting procedure and requested that checks signed prior to the commencement of the renewed effort be turned over to the office of the Superintendent.
The crux of the dilemma was highlighted in a January 21, 2013 letter obtained by FrontPageAfrica in which the embattled Montserrado County Superintendent Grace Kpaan wrote the speaker of the House Alex Tyler expressing her willingness to carry out the House’s mandate to proceed with the payment of fees to school for the Montserrado County Scholarship Program but issuing caution that the process lacked a proper vetting procedure and requested that checks signed prior to the commencement of the renewed effort be turned over to the office of the Superintendent. Monrovia - Rep. Edward Forh has a vocational school in the works in his Point Four District 16, a second vocational school named in honor of Rep. Thomas Fallah is nearing completion.
Throughout Liberia, members of the national legislature are popping out institutions in their names and using government funds, tax-payers’ money to foot the bills while scores of others have made it a habit of submitting a laundry list of students, they say are scholarship recipients paid for by lawmakers.

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