By Johnpaul Anih, Ph.D
If you ask around in Nkanu West today, one name comes up with surprising ease and warmth “Hon. John Ogbodo”. Not because he’s making noise or buying headlines, but because he’s quietly and consistently doing the work. For a local government area that had grown used to the politics of promise and fail, what’s happening now almost feels too good to be true. But it’s real.
Walk into his office any day and you’ll find him on seat, not hidden behind layers of protocol or personal assistants, but right there, present and ready to listen.
You’ll find no red tape, no gatekeepers, no “come tomorrow” excuses. The door is always open, the seat always warm, and the ear ever attentive. Whether you’re a farmer from Umueze, a youth from Agbani or a market woman from Amurri.
His door doesn’t recognize class or status. Go there, you’ll get a chair and you’ll be heard. That kind of accessibility is rare. Too rare.
He isn’t just occupying space, he’s carrying the weight of the office with seriousness and humility. He understands what it means to be elected. He knows who he’s working for, the people, and he has shown that through actions, not words.
Now, I won’t compare him to his predecessors. That’s not the point.
But to be honest, Nkanu West has entered a different kind of season under his watch.
When the party under the solid leadership of Governor Peter Mbah called on him to serve, the reaction wasn’t mixed. The applause was thunderous. It was joy across board. Streets celebrated and party faithful felt confident.
A loyal party man who understands the delicate dance of political structure had arrived.
And why not? The people knew what they were getting ‘a servant’, not a “boss”, a leader with calloused hands, not manicured detachment.
Since taking office, Hon. Ogbodo has not disappointed. He hit the ground running, not with the empty fanfare of ribbon cuttings, but with the grit of real work.
Take a drive through the communities and you’ll see it. Access roads are under construction, especially those leading to the new Smart Green Schools and Type-Two Hospitals, aligning directly with Governor Mbah’s reforms in education and healthcare.
These are not cosmetic projects, they are providing access to services that were once out of reach.
Environmental sanitation has also received a major boost. Waste bins now stand tall in key locations. Roads that used to be blocked by debris like those in Umueze, Obe, and Ozalla have been cleared and beautified with flowers and landscaping. There’s a touch of pride returning to public spaces.
One project that caught the attention of many is the revamp of the long-abandoned Eke Agbani abattoir. It’s no longer the eyesore it used to be. It has been transformed into a modern facility, complete with toilets, solar-powered boreholes and water tanks. A public health intervention right?
There’s also what’s happening at Four Corner Park in Ozalla where the council is tackling the age-old problem of open defecation. That may not make flashy headlines, but for those living there, it’s a big deal. It’s about dignity.
Drainages along the Enugu – Agbani road have been cleared. Why? Because Hon. Ogbodo understands that a flood doesn’t care about politics, it just destroys.
He quickly addressed the flood threats that once kept residents awake during the rainy season.
The once-choked neighborhoods with the chaos of unplanned buildings are being reclaimed.
Other ongoing projects? The Ngene-Ukwa bridge at Achikpa in Ndegu Akpugo is awaiting commissioning. Other internal roads? Quiet, but making steady progress.
These projects are the threads stitching together a more mobile and functional Nkanu West.
But beyond the physical projects, it’s his style of leadership that people are talking about, his openness, his respect for all and his refusal to use political power as a tool for revenge or exclusion.
He values results and believes in only one side “the people’s side”.
Gone are the days of political thuggery and strongman tactics. Ogbodo has in turn, elevated competence and credibility.
His philosophy? “Peace toward all, malice toward none.” And from what we’re seeing, it’s not just a catchy line, it’s the reality on the ground.
In today’s Nkanu West, no one is too poor, too unknown or too politically unaffiliated to be heard.
Yes, things are different now.
He has not just raised the bar, he has redrawn the entire beat.
And if this is what local governance looks like under Hon. John Ogbodo, then maybe, just maybe, Nkanu West has finally found its rhythm.
Johnpaul Anih, Ph.D, is an Academic, Journalist, and Researcher.