‘The Punch’ News On Uniforms, Meals’ Budget, Mere Fabrications – FIRS

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The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) has described The Punch newspaper’s report on its approved budgetary provisions for uniforms and meals for the 2022 fiscal year as totally ill-informed and baseless and advised the public to  ignore in its entirety the newspaper’s ‘misleading’ report..

The federal revenue agency in a statement issued by the Special Assistant to the FIRS Executive Chairman on Media and Communications, Johannes Wojuola, stated that the management wished to draw the attention of the taxpaying public and the staff to yet another fatuous publication by the PUNCH Newspaper with the caption: “FIRS to spend N2.8bn on uniforms, N550m on meals” in its edition of 17th October 2021, and to urge all concerned to ignore the publication in its entirety, for it is utterly misleading.

She pointed out that it should be obvious to everyone that the reference the newspaper made to the budget for uniforms  was not only false but also a misrepresentation of the facts.

According to her, the management maintained that in the first place, it was not true that the Service had delivered the Budget Estimate to the two chambers of the National Assembly, but rather, the draft budget estimate was submitted only to the House Committee on Finance.

The Executive Chairman’s media and communications aide also recalled that the newspaper  claimed that “the total budget of the FIRS stands at N228 billion”  and described the claim as blatantly untrue.

She further clarified: “Again, what the newspaper referred to as Uniform is the Corporate Outfit (Dressing Allowance) enjoyed by all the staff. Similarly, the sum of N17.8 billion being bandied by the newspaper as an estimate for miscellaneous expenses is grossly false.

“To be sure, the correct figure is N11.36 billion which represents the estimate for key administrative expenses for the whole year that the Service proposed to the National Assembly being an amount that would be incurred when approved, in respect of its over 500 operating offices and functions as well as for its 11,300 workforce.

“For clarity, the estimated expenses are for medical expenses for over 11,300 staff, publicity, adverts & taxpayers education, welfare packages & festivity allowance to staff, corporate outfit grant (dressing allowance to staff), honorarium & sitting allowance for staff/stakeholders, sporting activities, and postages & courier services.

“The public is, therefore, to note that the amount budgeted for the above-listed items represents merely 5.26% of the total budget estimate for the year, 2022.

“With these details of well-intentioned provisions in the budgetary estimates which were put together by the relevant departments in the Service, it is crystal clear that the Management is consciously committed to quality service delivery and staff welfare.

“Therefore, Management will continue to do everything within the limits of available resources to motivate and bouy up the morale of the staff”, Wojuola added.

The communications expert concluded that as a revenue-generating agency, the Service remained strongly committed to its mandate of mobilising revenue for the three tiers of government, stressing that the management, therefore, “frowns at the uncharitable attempt to drag its well-wrought tax administration efforts into the murky waters of politics, as doing so will not serve any positive purpose.”

 

 

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