Editorial
Decongest pavements at Circle area
Dear Editor,
I write to wish you and your staff a Happy New Year and commend you for the good work you have done over the years.
It is my prayer that the good Lord bless you and make available the resources you need to do a better work in the New Year.
I wish to bring your attention to the return of traders to the pavements at the Kwame Nkrumah Circle area.
In the previous decongestion exercise before the holidays, I noticed the authorities intentionally allowed them some freedom to sell at certain areas with lines drawn to demarcate an area for them to do their business.
A visit to the area in the first week of the year revealed that these traders have gone beyond those demarcations and are selling on the spaces left for pedestrians.
The pedestrians are therefore left with narrow pathways to navigate, creating unnecessary congestion in the area and making it difficult for people to move around freely.
I wish to use this platform to inform the authorities about the development. They should send their officers to the market areas to check this for themselves and make sure they move back to the areas designated for them.
Mike Niiaste, Kaneshie
Join our WhatsApp Channel now!
https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VbBElzjInlqHhl1aTU27
Editorial
Reduce prices of school feeding fees

Dear Editor,
AS schools reopen after the holiday, pressure will start to mount on both parents, guardians and teachers.
As a parent, I wish to use this platform to appeal to the basic school authorities through the Ghana Education Service (GES) to reduce the prices of food served our children.
It is very clear and obvious to all that prices of foodstuff have reduced drastically and that was the reason people felt the last Christmas was the best in recent years.
From tomatoes, onions and other vegetables needed to make good meals for the children have seen a reduction in prices.
It will therefore be unfortunate if the school authorities are not humane enough to reduce the school feeding charges. That would amount to wickedness.
This is something the authorities must see to. It will no doubt ease the huge burden on the parents.
Parents were reasonable enough with two different increments when prices shot up. Now that prices seem to have dropped, the schools should do the needful.
That would create some goodwill between the teachers and the parents.
Rose Aboagyewaa, Kasoa
Join our WhatsApp Channel now!
https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VbBElzjInlqHhl1aTU27
Editorial
Happy New Year to our cherished readers
ANOTHER New Year is here again and staff of The Spectator, warmly wishes our cherished clients, readers and everyone a Happy New Year!
We hope your holidays were filled with joy, relaxation, peace and love as the season depicted.
This year, we look forward to sharing more exciting content with you. Your readership drives our growth.
Thank you for your trust in us and devotion in reading our weekly newspaper.
As a reminder, The Spectator is still committed to being your weekend companion per our slogan. The newspaper features mainly soft news which covers stories like lifestyle, arts (entertainment) and culture among others.
The year is young and we look forward to an exciting year ahead, full of great opportunities.
We therefore urge our readers to keep reading The Spectator, to keep them company over the weekend and beyond.
May 2026 be a year full of good health, success, fruitful achievements and abundant blessings.
Happy New Year!



