Christian Aid is working with others to end poverty in Africa. At the heart of this vision is transformation of the lives of people who live in poverty, empowering them to have a brighter future. Christian Aid is seeking staff to manage a major donor funded accountability programme in Ghana.
About the role
Ensure timely disbursement of funds to Grant Partners and the quick resolution of disbursement related issues. Generate regular updates on status of Partner grant utilisation and establish an efficient mechanism to monitor and improve Partner burn rates. Maintain up to date database and archiving of relevant Grant Partner information and documentation to ensure efficient grant administration and close out of projects on STAR-Ghana Grant Management System. He/she will manage full compliance and adherence to guidelines and protocols regarding the Grant Management system, sharing monthly updates whilst conducting regular compliance and support visits to Grant Partners.
The role will also support with the assessment of the capacity of prospective Grant Partners in their application for grant funding, to establish their ability to manage the provisionally agreed grant in accordance with the terms and conditions of the grant funding arrangement with STAR-Ghana and to achieve appropriate value for money.
About you
This role is line managed by the Grants & Due Diligence Manager and based in Accra. You need to have considerable experience in a related programme environment and will need to have understanding of the working of NGOs and experience in dealing with institutional donors. You need to have exposure to and experience in grants and partner management, monitoring and evaluation and the management of complex multi-stakeholder relationships. You need to be proactive and able to work with minimal supervision to deliver timely, quality and excellence in your role’s expectations.
Further information
This role requires applicants to have the right to work in the country where this position is based.
We value diversity and aspire to reflect this in its workforce. We welcome applications from people from all sections of the community, irrespective of race, colour, gender, age, disability, sexual orientation, religion or belief.
You can expect a wide range of rewards and benefits and flexibility that will ensure you enjoy a good work/life balance.
Competency questions
As part of your application you will be asked to demonstrate your suitability by giving answers to the following questions:
Building Partnerships
Tell us about a time when you had to establish and maintain relationships with a wide range of contacts and networks based on mutual rapport and respect; What was the context? Why did you need to establish the new relationships and why was your attitude to this important? What was your task? What outcomes were being sought? What actions did you take? How did you take them? What was the impact of your actions? Were you successful?
Steward Resources
Please tell us about a time when you were able to take action to end or reduce the inefficient use of resources; What was the context? What was expected of you? What action(s) did you take? What was the impact of your actions? In what way(s) were you successful?
Communicate Effectively
Tell us about a time when you knew you had communicated some information clearly and concisely to someone else; What was the situation? What was the information or message you had to communicate? How did you communicate? What method(s) did you use? What was the outcome? How did you know you had communicated concisely and clearly?
Christian Aid is working with others to end poverty in Africa. At the heart of this vision is transformation of the lives of people who live in poverty, empowering them to have a brighter future. Christian Aid is seeking staff to manage a major donor funded accountability programme in Ghana.
About the role
Grant Officer role is finance bias and geared towards external support to strengthening financial management capacity building and internal controls of Grant Partner Organisation. Specifically, among the duties of this position will include: Providing support to partners in building robust internal control systems and processes and to conduct regular field monitoring and support visits to Partner organisations. As the need arises, the Grant Officer will support Partners acquire the requisite skills to manage grant through on and off-site trainings. The role also ensures timely Partner financial reporting and the review of Partner reports. He/she will support with the finance and budget related processes in awarding grant to Partners through to the close out of Partner projects. While supporting Partner project audit process, the position holder will support Partners in implementing audit recommendations. He/she will collaborate closely with STAR-Ghana Programme and Grant teams in matters relating Grant management.
About you
This role is line managed by the Head of Finance (STAR-Ghana) and based in Accra. You need to have considerable experience in a related programme environment and will need to have understanding of the working of NGOs and experience in dealing with institutional donors. You need to have exposure to monitoring and evaluation and experience in working with and supporting local partners, NGOs CBOs and CSOs in grant and financial management. You need to be proactive and able to work with minimal supervision to deliver timely, quality and excellence in your role’s expectations.
Further information
This role requires applicants to have the right to work in the country where this position is based.
We value diversity and aspire to reflect this in its workforce. We welcome applications from people from all sections of the community, irrespective of race, colour, gender, age, disability, sexual orientation, religion or belief.
You can expect a wide range of rewards and benefits and flexibility that will ensure you enjoy a good work/life balance.
Competency questions
As part of your application you will be asked to demonstrate your suitability by giving answers to the following questions:
Build Partnerships
Tell us about a time when you were proactive in taking on new and additional work to achieve a team or organisational goal; What was the situation? What was the new/additional work? What was your task? Why did you need to be pro-active? What did you do? Why? How?What was the outcome? What was the impact of what you did?
Communicate Effectively
Tell us about a time when you handled a difficult issue with someone else with openness, honesty and respect; What was the context? What did you have to do? What did you say and how? What was the result? If you were successful, how did you know?
Deliver Results
Please give us an example of a time when you had to say no to another colleague or team because of other priorities while acknowledging their needs; What was the situation? What were the competing priorities? What was your task? What action(s) did you take? What was the effect of you saying no? What was the outcome(s)? What did you learn from the experience?
Anti-Corruption & Local Governance Grantees equipped with financial management skills
STAR-Ghana in partnership with Humentum (formerly known as MANGO), a consortium partner of the STAR-Ghana programme has organised a financial management training for some selected Grant Partners of the STAR-Ghana programme. The training was informed by due diligence assessments of partners under the Anti-corruption and Local Governance Calls of the programme
STAR-Ghana conducted due diligence of its partners beginning April to June 2018 to assess prospective grant partners’ capacity on financial management. The assessment established some capacity gaps that existed within some organizations.
The areas of concern included but not limited to financial planning, financial monitoring and reporting, internal controls and audit management. The training was attended by one programme officer and one finance officer from each of the selected organizations.
The purpose of the training was to strengthen the capacity of participants in financial management which will directly support partners to meet STAR-Ghana’s requirements for financial management and for the financial sustainability of the selected organizations beyond STAR-Ghana’s support.
The training – wholly participatory and activity based, focussed on the key principles and concepts of financial management, financial planning, accounting records, financial monitoring, and internal control systems.
Participants expressed their appreciation of the content of the training and embraced the opportunity to have financial accompanier who will be deployed by STAR-Ghana to provide further support in the course of their respective project implementation.
The event was organised in three different locations across the country: from the 18th to the 26th of September 2018. Specifically: 18th - 20th Accra, 24th - 26th Ho and Kumasi concurrently. A total of 64 participants from 32 grantees participated in the training which was facilitated by two (2) Associates of Humentum with support from the Gender Equality and Capacity Building workstream of STAR-Ghana.
National Convening – Northern Ghana beyond Aid
STAR-Ghana in collaboration with the Integrated Social Development Centre (ISODEC), TAMA Foundation and the Northern Development Authority (NDA) held the Northern Sector edition of a high-level conference on Ghana Beyond Aid in Bolgatanga.
The two-day conference which brought together the academia, Civil Society Organizations, Regional Ministers, Municipal and District Chief Executives, traditional and religious leaders in Northern, Upper East and Upper West Regions, forms part of STAR-Ghana’s series of Convenings with the broader range of stakeholders for dialogue, and to support the identification of opportunities and critical entry points for action and engagement.
Hon Frank Fuseini, delivering the welcome address indicated that: Ghana beyond Aid is in tune with the changing world with a move from aid and grants to partnerships and development cooperation. “Northern Ghana must prepare itself to take advantage of the new paradigm of Ghana Beyond Aid. To this extent, Foreign Development Assistance must be redirected to building social infrastructure" he said.
Prof Agnes Apusigah, member of the STAR-Ghana (SC) speaking on behalf of Dr Esther Esther Ofei Aboagye, Chairperson of the the STAR-Ghana SC. Said that "STAR-Ghana has a consistent and deliberate agenda to ensure civil society thinks around the issue of sustainability within the ever-changing environment, using our 3CL (Convening, Coordinating, Catalyzing and Learning) approach as a means of promoting strategic change in a coordinated manner"
In an address read on his behalf, Hon Yaw Osafo-Maafo, Senior minister, said the drive to move the country beyond aid does not mean Ghana would be refusing to accept development aid. The government would rather make sure that donor support tied in with development priorities of the nation. “We will politely decline aid that is not in line with Ghana’s development priorities.” It should also be consistent with the effort at increasing efficiency and value for money in public sector expenditures.
Mr. Osafo-Maafo noted that the three regions were a popular destination for aid and direct donor support and said, “While this is welcoming, it is important to take stock and see if we are indeed achieving the expected impact”. He made reference to the dwindling volumes of aid and indicated that it was time the nation moved aggressively towards modernizing its agriculture.
Dr Hakeem Wemah, Board Chairman of the Northern Development Authority and Chairman of the high-Level conference, said the area had been and remained a major beneficiary of development assistance because of the level and depth of poverty.
Grant-aided programs had financed education, health care, agriculture, roads and bridges, nutrition interventions, school feeding and occasionally humanitarian relief when the people were faced disasters like flooding.
“We recall the Upper Region Agricultural Development Programme (URADEP) largely World Bank funded, which was the main driver of agricultural transformation in the 1970s and 1980s in the Upper Regions, Northern Regional Rural Integrated Programme (NORRIP) largely funded by Canada which invested in water resources and social programmes in the Northern Region. Both died when donor funds ceased. No post-mortem was ever carried out,” Dr Wemah added.
The output of the conference will be channelled to the Hon Osafo Maafo Committee and shared with constituencies, especially civil society at the regional level to map out a strategy going forward.