Thursday 30 December 2021

AN EVALUATION OF EFFECTIVE STRATEGIES IN MANAGEMENT OF TALBA HOUSING ESTATE MINNA, NIGER STATE

AN EVALUATION OF EFFECTIVE STRATEGIES IN MANAGEMENT OF TALBA HOUSING ESTATE MINNA, NIGER STATE

ABSTRACT

This project work focuses on the evaluation of effective strategies in management of Talba Housing Estate Minna, Niger State. The specific objectives of the study include to  examine the problems encountered in management Talba Housing Estate Minna in Niger state; to analyze the prospects of residential properties management, to examine the challenges confronting the effective management of Talba housing estate Minna and to identify and examine the effective strategies adopted in the management of Talba housing estate. Relevant literatures were also reviewed to aid the study ranging from the concept of management to its functions. The researcher adopts the use of questionnaires and field survey in gathering relevant data required for the study. Data were also analyzed in tables using percentages. The findings of this project work revealed that, the profound and exacerbating managerial challenges in the estate is not just insufficient fund and changes of management but that of bureaucracy and  to top it all, policy and governmental changes as the major challenges that enfeeble the management of public Housing Estate. The strengthening of managerial capacity, provision of adequate fund to carryout regular maintenance without delay and redressing of political practices that undermine efficient management will go a long way in proffering solution to the above identified challenges. 

CHAPTER ONE

1.0     INTRODUCTION 

1.1    BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY

Public estate management is emerging as a managerial science today (Kyle and Baird, 1995). It transcends beyond the role of rent collector (Li, 1997). Managing a residential property involves establishing goals, objectives and policies and implementation of strategies to achieve those goals and objectives. 

Singh (1994, 1996) posited that residential property management is an activity that seeks to control interests in property owner and particular purpose for which the property is held. Wong (1999) considers residential property management as the work carried out to manage and maintain the development including its facilities at the level that will retain or enhance the value of the residential property, create a safe, functional and conducive living environment for occupants, keep or restore every facility in efficient working order and in good state of repair, and project a good appearance or image for the development. Ismail (1996) regards residential property management responsibility as including all the necessary making to ensure the economic and physical vitality of residential property assets. 

The management of public estate assets particularly poses unique form of problems ranging from over inflation of invoices, corruption, nepotism, and awarding of contract works to contractors not knowledgeable about the jobs to be carried out. This array of issues and others, calls for monetization policy of the Federal Government, where all government properties are transferred to the private entities few years ago. 

Many public estate developments and their post-construction management are undertaken with the intent of accomplishing immediate social, economic, financial and aesthetic benefits or returns, but they are executed with minimal concern for sustaining these benefits thereafter (Ihuah and Fortune, 2013; Ihuah and Eaton, 2013). The sustainability of public estate projects after completion is a concern that should not be overlooked in the built environment since housing estates provide shelter to human beings. It is also one amongst the four basic human needs that harmonize the other basic needs through the opportunity of providing comfort, security and safety to people. 

The public housing estates prominence is sustained with appropriate post-construction management and other beneficial sustainability issues are tackled with respect to the built environment, economic growth and enhanced development in a country (Ihuah and Eaton, 2013). Therefore, the imperative to ensure that public estates returns are continually accomplished and enjoyed by all stakeholders should be the objective for any development organisation to achieve. 

The challenges be devilling management of public estates vary with different context and analytical perceptions. The problems of chronic financial crisis, poor maintenance, lack of manpower and strained relationship between public estates residents and the management has been mentioned by (Davidson 1999) as recurring themes of public estate management issues, while Okpala (1977), identified bureaucracy corruption.

This implies that, there is need to look at the management of existing Public Housing Estates in order to restore them back to habitable condition through regular management and maintenance so that the intensity building management becomes higher with its age especially in the face of climatic change and its negative and adverse effects on the building itself, the facilities and the physical environment for sustainable development.

This project work therefore, examines the management of public estate in Niger State with a particular interest in Zuma Housing Estate Suleja with a view to identify the challenges confronting the effective management practice suitable for the Estate and other public Estate in Nigeria.

Public estate management is also the management of government property, equipment, tooling and physical capital assets that are acquired and used to build, repair and maintain the public estate. Property management involves the processes, systems and manpower required to manage the life cycle of all public residential property as defined above including acquisition, control, accountability, responsibility, maintenance, utilization and disposition (Njoku, 2006). 

According to Ebie (2012), duties involved in public property management generally will include a minimum of these basic primary tasks

  1. The full and proper screening or testing of an tenants/applicant’s credit, criminal history, rental history and ability to pay.
  2. Lease contracting or accepting rent using legal documents approved for the area in which the property is located.
  3. Mitigation and remediation regarding any maintenance issues, generally within a budget, with prior or conveyed consent via a Limited Power of Attorney legally agreed to by the property owner.

There are many facets to this public property (estate) management, including managing the accounts and finances of the real estate/residential properties, and participating in or initiating litigation with tenants, contractors and insurance agencies. Litigation is at times considered a separate function, set aside for trained attorneys. Although a person will be responsible for this in his/her job description, there may be an attorney working under a property manager. Special attention is given to landlord/tenant law and most commonly evictions, non-payment, harassment, reduction of pre-arranged services, and public nuisance are legal subjects that gain the most amount of attention from residential property managers. 

1.2     STATEMENT OF RESEARCH PROBLEM

According to Bello (2008), residential property is more than a mere shelter; it includes all facilities within and around it, embracing a bundle of services which entails both product and process. Management of public estate embraces in all ramifications the maintenance and development process, be it economic, social, physical). In fact, management of these properties has been subject of focus by researcher in recent times based on the cumbersome nature of the process. The problem of poor management of public estate is a global phenomenon and the severity of the problem differs from one nation to another and ranges from lacks adequate funding since it is tagged a government property, lack of routine inspection and unskilled management staff due to instability in management from the Government, changes in government, delay in carrying out maintenance work on the estate due to bureaucracy corruption and questionable character of staffs, Strained relationship between public estates residents and the management. e.t.c. However, the researcher seeks to evaluate the effective strategies in management of Talba Housing Estate Mina, Niger state. 

1.3     AIM AND OBJECTIVES

1.3.1    Aim

The aim of the study is to evaluate the effective strategies in management of Talba housing estate Minna, Niger State.

1.3.2     Objectives

To achieve the above aim the following objectives will be pursued;

  1. To  examine the problems encountered in management Talba Housing Estate Minna in Niger state;
  2. To analyze the prospects of residential properties management,
  3. To examine the challenges confronting the effective management of Talba housing estate Minna
  4. To identify and examine the effective strategies adopted in the management of Talba housing estate.

1.4     RESEARCH QUESTIONS

The following questions are very pertinent to the achievement of the objectives of  this study.

  1. What are the problems encountered in management Talba Housing Estate Minna in Niger state?
  2. What are the prospects of residential properties management?
  3. What are the challenges confronting the effective management of Talba housing estate Minna?
  4. What are the effective strategies adopted in the management of Talba housing estate?

1.5    SCOPE OF THE STUDY

The study addresses the evaluation of effect strategies in management of public estate and it is restricted to Talba housing estate Minna, Niger State. This is because the general management is done by the government’s agents. The project work evaluates the management of public estate in Niger State. 

1.6    SIGNIFICANCE OF THE RESEARCH 

Public Estate requires maintenance in order to enhance their values and life span. After the development of public estate, the problem of management set in with few years of completion, other problems began if adequate and appropriate strategies are not employed. 

This research will enlightens both government and the general public on the need to engage the services of professionals (Estate Surveyors and Valuers) in the management of public estate, so that the aim of developing such Estate will not be defeated.

The outcome of this study will educate the general public on the problems and prospects of managing residential properties in Nigeria emphasizing on its proper management and some other management challenges which will form a guide for estate managers in decision making.

This research will also serve as a resource base to other scholars and researchers interested in carrying out further research in this field subsequently, if applied will go to an extent to provide new explanation to the topic.

1.7    DEFINITION OF TERMS 

MANAGEMENT: Allison (1967) defined management as the selection of goals and the planning, procurement, organization and control of the resources for their achievement.

MAINTENANCE: Lawal M. (2010) defined maintenance as the whole range of operation necessary to preserve a building with its finishes and fittings so that it continues to provide the same facilities and services which it did at its initial stage of development. 

HOUSING: Housing extends beyond the concept of shelter. In the word of Abraham (1980) in his book “Housing in the Modern Market” it is not only shelter but part of the fabric of the neighborhoods life and the whole social milieu. It touches on many facts of industrialization, economic activities and development. 

PUBLIC ESTATE: Are land and building owned and directly managed by public authorities and those rights of control which public authorities exercise over the estate of the private owners. 

ESTATE: Udechukwu (2006) defined estate as “A legal entity denoting the character and quality of right that an individual or individuals possessed on a property. 

HOUSING ESTATE: In the word of Essien G.A (2012) in his Lecture Note “An Approach to Property Development II (Vol. 3)”. “Is an area of land on which many houses are built either by private enterprise or by a public authority”.

DEVELOPMENT: Is the process of generating latent values in land or creating benefits there from by incurring on it costs in the form of labour, capital or management skill (Umeh, 1983).

PUBLIC DEVELOPER: Nathaniel (1979) cited that public developer deal directly  with government involvement in the provision of housing, public properties (Estate) are therefore owned, controlled and managed by Federal, State, Local Government and other public bodies which are set up and functioned under state and their aims is usually based on political, social and economic ground. 

OBSOLESCENCE: Obsolescence is refers to as the wear and tear of the fabric of a building. It is a loss in the usefulness of a building and is a deficiency in design layout and equipment (Lawal M. 2010). 

SLUM: Adetoro S.A and Mbazor D.N (2007) defined it as “An area of advanced blight condition usually requiring cleaning or re-building as the most effective corrective action. It can also be said to be a poor dirty crowded area in an urban area. 

BLIGHT: Babatunde J. (1996) described blight as “Premature obsolescence and physical deterioration or other factors that has become undesirable for or impossible for normal development. Blight ranged from simple to complex.

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