By ALPHONCE SHIUNDU
Governors are plotting to amend the Constitution
to raise the minimum amount of money that will be sent to the counties
to at least three times the amount prescribed in the Constitution.
The Council of Governors, through its chairman, Isaac Ruto, told the Nation Monday that a Constitutional amendment Bill on the proposal is being drafted, and it will be ready “in the next ten days”.
“We have to amend the
Constitution to fix the amount to be disbursed from the national
government to the counties to something which is reasonable. Anything
over Sh300 billion is reasonable,” said Mr Ruto.
The quest for more money for
the counties comes against a backdrop of the failure by the National
Government and the National Assembly to yield to the proposals of the
governors, through their respective senators, to have Sh258 billion
disbursed to the counties.
Haggling
Though the governors were
eventually cornered to accept Sh210 billion that President Kenyatta
approved when he signed the Division of Revenue Bill into law, they
added that the haggling between the Senate and the National Assembly
over money for counties is unnecessary.
The Bill targets article
203(2) of the Constitution which reads: “For every financial year, the
equitable share of the revenue raised nationally that is allocated to
county governments shall be not less than fifteen per cent of all
revenue collected by the national government.”
Mr Ruto said the amount ought
to be raised “so that the national government and the county governments
share the revenues at 55-45 per cent”.
Mr Ruto, who is also the
governor of Bomet, noted that many people had queries about the
absorption capacity of the county governments, especially, given the
fact that very little money has been going to the grassroots since
independence.
“Turkana only got around Sh500
million that was spent in the whole county in a whole financial year.
There was nothing to manage. Now, they are getting Sh6.5 billion. They
will absorb all that money. There’s capacity,” said Mr Ruto.
Leader of Majority in the
Senate Kithure Kindiki and a devolution expert Dr Conrad Bosire noted
that the move to shore up resources to the counties was welcome. Prof
Kindiki said he had not seen the Bill from the governors, but if it is
done “in good faith” then the senators will support it.
Marshal support
Dr Bosire, a doctoral
researcher at the University of the Western Cape, said the governors
will have to get a friendly senator to help them push the legislation
through the Senate, and also marshal support in the National Assembly to
ensure the Bill also sails through.
“
In South Africa, they devolve
close to 50 per cent of the resources to the provincial
governments…but in Kenya, this debate over resources for counties and
national government has to be informed by proper data,” said Dr Bosire
in an interview with the Nation.
He said both levels of
government –the national government and the county governments—have to
“objectively” discuss their roles, and have a look at the devolved
functions, and then reach a compromise on how much of the national
revenues should go to the national government and how much should go to
the devolved units.
As the governors pursue their
job, they will have to bear in mind the revenue allocation criteria
developed by the Commission on Revenue Allocation and approved by
Parliament; the cost of running county government structures; the
costing of the on-going devolved functions; and the need to “hold
harmless” the allocation of services to the counties, so that services
are not disrupted.
According to the Constitution,
any Bill that deals with amending part of the Constitution that deals
with devolution will have to be approved via a referendum, after both
Houses of Parliament give their nod. So, after dealing with Parliament,
the governors will have to convince the public that more money is
required at the grassroots.
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