
Uganda City Leaders Pledge Clean Streets and New Jobs
Newly elected officials in Masaka City's Nyendo-Mukungwe Division are taking on garbage mountains, broken roads, and youth unemployment with a bold five-year action plan. Residents who've watched sanitation problems grow now have reason for hope.
The new leadership team in Nyendo-Mukungwe Division just made promises that could transform daily life for thousands of Ugandans tired of living with trash piles and potholed streets.
Mayor Ronald Kasekende stood before residents and named the problem everyone sees: garbage has become a crisis, especially in the Nyendo and Katwe neighborhoods. His administration plans to ramp up waste collection using new equipment and work directly with communities to keep streets clean.
But the cleanup mission goes beyond trash cans. Kasekende pledged to fix crumbling roads, knowing better infrastructure means more businesses and better access to services. His team also plans to crack down on livestock roaming city streets and illegal buildings blocking roadways and public spaces.
"We shall not tolerate indiscipline in the city," Kasekende said, signaling a new era of enforcement.
Division Speaker Charles Edgar Luyombya tackled another painful reality: too many young people can't find work because the area lacks factories and investment opportunities. He's calling on government agencies and private companies to bring jobs to Nyendo-Mukungwe, giving youth a future in their own community.

Town Clerk Prosper Tagobya announced concrete progress already underway. The division recently acquired a garbage collection truck and plans to enforce trade regulations that keep urban areas organized and clean.
The Ripple Effect
When cities tackle sanitation, the benefits cascade through entire communities. Cleaner streets mean fewer diseases spreading through neighborhoods. Better roads connect farmers to markets and patients to hospitals. New industries don't just employ young people; they create opportunities for local businesses and reduce the desperation that drives crime.
The Nyendo-Mukungwe plan addresses interconnected problems that have held the division back. As garbage disappears and roads improve, property values typically rise. Businesses feel more confident investing. Parents worry less about their children's health and future prospects.
Kasekende acknowledged his team faces real obstacles, particularly staff shortages that slow down service delivery. But the division is moving forward anyway, starting with the resources they have.
Now comes the crucial part: turning pledges into visible change that residents can see on their streets and feel in their daily lives.
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Based on reporting by AllAfrica - Environment
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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