THE National Coordina­tor of the District Road Improvement Programme (DRIP), Mr Edwin Nii Lantey Vanderpuye, and J.A.

Plant Pool Ghana Ltd.

supplier of heavy-du­ty equipment in Ghana and the official distributor of LiuGong construction machinery, have commenced a nationwide inspec­tion of DRIP's fleet of heavy-du­ty equipment to ensure their operational readiness ahead of the programme's 2025 rollout.The inspection tour covered several districts in the Ashanti Region.During the tour, Mr Vander­puye expressed deep concern over the poor maintenance of equip­ment and the absence of suitable infrastructure to shelter them."Unfortunately, many of the machines are left under the sun and rain without any protection," he lamented."I urge the assemblies to construct sheds to preserve these national assets urgently," he said.He further admonished dis­trict coordinating directors and engineers over what he described as negligence and a poor mainte­nance culture.He was particularly dismayed at machines that had not been cleaned after use, warning that such practices threaten the long-term functionality of the equip­ment."We cannot allow these expensive machines to rot away, every piece of equipment must be cleaned and properly maintained," he said.The National Coordinator urged DRIP coordinators and machine operators at the district level to adopt a renewed sense of responsibility and pride in manag­ing these government investments.Mr Vanderpuye was accom­panied on the tour by Mr Samuel Aboagye, Deputy Director-Gener­al of the National Disaster Man­agement Organisation (NADMO), and Ing.

Ebenezer Danquah, Ashanti Regional Liaison Officer of J.A.