Under the blazing Fufore sun, as the rains threaten to fall and the fields wait for seeds, farmers in Adamawa State are breathing a little easier thanks to a timely gesture from one of their own. Mrs. Peace Audu, Chairperson of Fufore Local Government Area, rolled up her sleeves and handed out over 700 bags of fertiliser to local farmers ahead of this yearâs planting season. And this wasnât just any official function it was her Sallah gift to a people who depend on the land for their daily bread. For Musa Danladi, a maize farmer in Mayo-Ine, the intervention means the difference between hunger and hope. âI was planning to borrow to buy fertiliser,â he said, clutching his bag of NPK like a treasure. âNow I can farm with peace of mind. May God bless her.â Peace Auduâs face lit up as she watched the smiles unfold across the distribution site. âFor me, governance is not about sitting in an office itâs about touching lives,â she said. âOver 90 percent of our people are farmers. If we donât support them, we fail our people.â Sheâs right. Fufore is an agrarian community where farming isnât just a profession itâs a culture, a lifeline, and a legacy. The chairperson said her administration has a clear mission: to restore dignity to rural governance and make life easier for the people who feed the nation. âFor every assignment, there must be a vision and a mission,â she explained. âWe are here to rewrite the story of this local government, one bag of fertiliser at a time.â But Mrs. Audu didnât stop at fertiliser. She also spoke of reforms her team has made for local government workers who, for nearly a decade, were left out of welfare benefits. âFor 10 years, LG staff were forgotten,â she said. âSince I assumed office, weâve changed that. Weâve restored respect, transparency, and fairness.â Farmers say this yearâs intervention is the first time in years theyâve received support before the rains start when itâs most needed. âLast year, they gave us fertilizer after harvest, one woman joked. This year, we can actually use it. Mrs. Auduâs people-first approach is gaining traction. Farmers, civil servants, and even opposition voices have commended her leadership. Too many, sheâs not just a council boss sheâs a breath of fresh air in a system that often forgets the grassroots. As the rainy season unfolds, the people of Fufore are hopeful. With fertiliser now in hand, they look to the soil with renewed belief that this year, their sweat will bring a harvest worth the toil. And if the crops grow like their trust in her does, Peace Audu may just be sowing more than food sheâs planting a legacy.