 Some stakeholders in the health and environment sectors have advocated an upward review of a proposed fine of 5,000 Naira for violators of open defecation prohibition bill 2020 when passed into law by the Oyo State House of Assembly. Some of the participants were submitting their memorandum to the Committee on Environment and Ecology during a public hearing on the bill suggested a minimum amount of 10,000 Naira fine to serve as deterrent to others. Chairman of the Committee Olushola Awulabi explained that the practices of open defecation contaminate sources of drinking water and spread diseases like cholera, diarrhea and dysentery. The lawmaker emphasized that the idea is to key into the 2019 presidential executive order on open defecation and to end the practice of open defecation before 2025. We need a clean environment. We need an healthy environment. We need an environment that is welcoming, that will be free of sickness. And we know that a lot of our people need to be educated on how they are managing their self, their waste and their environment. The federal government is, to us, a name of having an LD, a sustainable environment. The state government is tapping into that. We will make sure that we will be on the heart look at all the time. Then at the same time, we will make sure that we stop for the effects of open defecation in our environment. And so many others that we have within our tradition to ensure that our environment is very clean. Area of sensitizations and enforcement, you understand. That is the area. That is the key area. Now what we are doing is not lack of laws. There have been laws over time, you understand. But the implementations of the law to make it effective, the efficacy of it, you understand. And there has to be people, you understand, to enforce the law after people have been briefed on how to do it properly. And when government has provided all the necessary things for people, then there shouldn't be any excuse from anybody to help again.