
The Association of Building and Civil Engineering Contractors of Ghana (ABCECG) is seeking strategies to reposition members for excellent service delivery.
A two day strategy session of the National Steering Committee came out with six broad thematic areas to be pursued within the 2 year term of the new President of the Association, Martins Nnuro.
The goals include a strong campaign for the establishment of an independent regulatory body for the construction industry, the constitution of a Contractors Council to be made up of various contractor associations and full fledge rebranding of the association including a facelift for its Secretariat which is currently in a deplorable state.
Other goals are aggressive and regular training for its members to ensure quality delivery of jobs, building bonds with similar building construction organizations in other countries for purposes of knowledge and technology transfer and the effective use of its website www.buildingconstractorsgh.com to reach out to members as well as advertise jobs and other opportunities.
Chairman of the Technical Committee of ABCECG, Rockson Dogbegah, says the Association is being positioned as a formidable organization which will seek the interest and growth of building contractors whilst promoting industrial excellence.
Story by Kofi Adu Domfeh/Luv Fm/Ghana


Ghana has everything needed to prosper yet graduates remain unemployed — Dr Step...
June 9: Cedi sells at GHS12.50 on forex market, GHS11.85 on BoG interbank
Stephen Amoah advocates mixed market economy to tackle rising cost of living in ...
Publish a clear and detailed BoG recapitalisation plan — NPP urges gov't
Completely abandon idea of selling BoG headquarters — NPP urges gov't
French President Macron to attend Ghana's Next Steps Conference on Reparatory Ju...
Nyinahin Catholic SHS teacher seen fighting female student in viral video arrest...
Beijing condemns US move to blacklist Chinese companies
Trump gets a cold reception at NBA Finals game as Spurs beat Knicks
Israel and Iran step back from further strikes after renewed clashes
