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Title: | CONVENIENCE SERVICE COMPANY LIMITED |
Authors: | OWUSU, BLESSING ISSAH, PETER PALITHA A. AMOAKO, GRACE ADDAI, SARAH AYAM, JOHN |
Keywords: | CONVENIENCE SERVICE COMPANY |
Issue Date: | 6-Dec-2012 |
Abstract: | Convenience Service Company Limited (CSLC) will be the name of the company. Convenience Service Company Limited would be a service provider that would be ahead of all other competitors in the same industry. It is to provide comfort and convenient ultra-modern Kumasi Very Improved Pit (KVIP) for the people of Aboabo no-2 a suburb of Kumasi. The head office is to be located at Aboabo no-2, opposite the Methodist Church (M/C) primary school. This area is clustered with all kinds of clients and it is easily accessible. The reason for this area was based on a research conducted by the group to establish the need for an improved place of convenience. Convenience Service Company limited would be a private limited liability company that would be managed by experts in environmental issues. Owusu Blessing who will be the general manager has five (5) years working experience with the Ghana Education Service (GES) in connection with environmental issues. Ayam John the operations and quality control manager also has a four (4)-year working experience as a environmental health officer at Manhyia District Hospital-Kumasi. Issah Peter has (24) years of service experience in public sector accounting, having worked in the Ghana Health service, will be in charge of purchasing, revenue collection and handling of finances. |
Description: | Household Sanitation in Kumasi, Ghana: A Description of Current Practices,Attitudes,and Perceptions. This research was conducted by Dale Wittington, Donald. Lauria, Kyeongae Choe, Jeffrey A. Hughes, Venkateswarlu, Swarna. University of North Carolina,Charpel Hill. In collaboration with Albert M. Wright ( The World Bank, Washington DC stated that “Over 1200 household in Kumasi, Ghana were interviewed in 1989 about their current sanitation practices, perception of existings sanitations conditions, expenditures, and their knowlege of improved sanitation options. The result of the survey and related research revealed that an appalling from a public health perspective, dangerious situation. Households were generating about 25,000 per month cubic meters of waste per month, but only about 10% of it was removed from the city. The remaining 90% was left in the urban environment. In aggregate, household were spending about US$75,000 per month to use the existing sanitation systems ( about 75% of which was spend for the of public latrines). People in Kumasi were only spending about US$1.50 per capital annually for sanitation services, and correspondingly, were getting very poor service. Household were quite open to the ideal simple, low-cost, on-site solution to their sanitation problems.”(source:2005, world bank). |
URI: | http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/182 |
Appears in Collections: | Business Administration -ST |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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CONVENIENCE.pdf | 346.66 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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