Desirous to inculcate the tenets of effective waste management into the younger generation, Lagos Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) has embarked on a massive advocacy programme among primary and secondary schools in the state.
LAWMA’s Managing Director/CEO, Mr Ibrahim Odumboni said that the agency’s decision to commence the school advocacy programme was informed by the need to sensitise children on ethics of proper waste management, thereby catching them young, for better society.
He said: “Our main aim for embarking on massive school advocacy is to raise the next generation of citizens who understand the place and importance of effective waste management and environmental sustainability in society. We cannot afford to be nonchalant about this because the future is at stake”.
Odumboni said that the authority, working with other stakeholders, including the Lagos State Universal Basic Education Board, was on a mission to create environmental awareness in all primary and secondary schools to change the narrative of waste and environmental management in the state.
“One of the objectives of LAWMA Academy is to raise the next generation of solid waste management scholars and entrepreneurs whilst providing students with a variety of individualised and creative learning experience in waste management, through our School Advocacy Programme that delivers waste education and sensitisation to students in primary and secondary schools in Lagos State”, he stated.
The LAWMA boss emphasised the need for parents and guardians to encourage their children and wards to embrace the culture of recycling, waste sorting at the point of generation, and containerisation, adding that habits formed in tender years would be difficult to be abandoned.
He said the task of keeping Lagos clean remained a collective responsibility, where all stakeholders were expected to play their roles to establish a consistent clean environment.
In the on-going school advocacy programme, LAWMA visited six schools at Lagos Island Local Government Area. They included Ebute Elefun Nursery/Primary School, Anglican Girls Seminary School, Christ Church Cathedral School, Tinubu Methodist School, St. Mary’s Convent School, and St. Mary Girls.