President Uhuru Kenyatta and Deputy President William Ruto chairs the
first cabinet meeting at State House, Nairobi. President Uhuru Kenyatta
Thursday directed an audit of all ministries as part of a far-reaching
cleaning up of the government payroll. FILE PHOTO
Taxpayers have been losing more than Sh1.8 billion annually through dubious payments to ghost civil servants.
But
the noose could soon be tightening on rogue senior public service
officers who have been pocketing the money after President Uhuru
Kenyatta Thursday directed an audit of all ministries as part of a
far-reaching cleaning up of the government payroll.
“In
an initial eight ministries partially audited, we have found evidence
that indicates that a considerable number of officers who are either on
secondment, are deceased, retired or have deserted their duties and who
therefore ought not to be remunerated, are still retained in the public
service payroll,” said Mr Kenyatta in a statement to newsrooms. (READ: Ministries in surprise staff head count)
The
audit had revealed that the government was losing Sh70 million in
irregular payments to non-existent civil servants in the eight
ministries.
“If indeed the same applies to all the 18
ministries, the government loses some Sh150 million monthly and
approximately Sh1.8 billion annually,” he said, adding that the
revelations had caused consternation.
Mr Kenyatta
directed the ministry of Devolution and Planning and the National
Treasury to outsource the audit and cleaning up of the payroll to a
reputable company. (Get the full statement here)
The work should be undertaken within three months and a report submitted to his office.
The audit will be led by the ministry of Devolution, which is in charge of the directorate of public service management.
Last
year, Health Cabinet secretary James Macharia said devolution had made
it possible to expose the ghost workers in his ministry.
The
enormity of the problem of ghost workers began to emerge after the
national government transferred payrolls to the devolved governments
earlier this week.
Governors have been cleaning up the
payrolls through headcounts to determine the number of workers on the
ground against those received from the Ministry of Devolution.
WAGE BILL
An
analysis of a number of counties revealed a grim picture. The number of
workers in Nyandarua County jumped from 313 to 1,488 while Kisumu
County has 3,497 civil servants in the payroll with a wage bill of Sh193
million every month.
In Mombasa county, the numbers
now stand at 2,300 workers with a monthly wage bill of Sh80 million
while in Taita-Taveta county, some 1092 workers were seconded to the
county with a wage bill of Sh50 million per month.
In
Nyeri, the numbers have swelled to 2,943 with the annual wage bill now
standing at Sh2.3 billion while in Siaya County, the numbers now stand
at 1,900 workers with an estimated Sh 48 million wage bill.
An
officer offering technical advice to the human resource committee at
the Council of Governors who sought anonymity because of the sensitivity
of the matter, said those to be paid by the end of the month will be
determined through a headcount being undertaken in most counties.
Wajir Governor Ahmed Abdullahi, who is also the chairman of Finance and
Economic Committee of the Council of Governors, confirmed that counties
will only pay those who are working and those absent for good reasons
like study leave.
“Counties will only pay those on the
ground which we are trying to establish through a headcount as well as
those absent for good reasons like study leave,” he said in a telephone
interview.
The Devolution ministry is said to have collated the numbers from all the ministries which it then forwarded to the counties.
To
facilitate the payments, the ministry has installed the integrated
payroll and personal database (IPPD) system in all the 47 counties and
291 officers trained on how to manage the payroll.
According
to the ministry, the counties have confirmed they are using the system
and now have the capacity to manage the payroll.
The
transfer of the first batch of workers in December caused a furore with
most counties reporting many of those transferred were ghost workers.
The
Nairobi City County — which was among the most affected — received
5,334 workers for the devolved functions which included health,
agriculture, pre- school education and wildlife. The cost of the payroll
was established to be Sh6.4 billion per year.
Following
a head count conducted by the Governor, Dr Evans Kidero, only 2,900
people were found to be working while about 2,400 people could not be
accounted for despite being in the payroll. (READ: Governors cry foul over ghost workers)
The
ministry of Health for instance moved 4,300 health workers to Nairobi
but only 2,130 were found to be working on the ground.
(READ EDITORIAL: Ghost workers: Firm action must be taken)
-Additional
reporting by Moses Odhiambo, Everlyne Okewo, Anita Chepkoech, David
Macharia, James Ngunjiri, Mathias Ringa and Jonathan Manyindo.
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