The Parliamentary Service Commission will get Sh5 billion after the supplementary budget team yielded to pressure from the MPs.
The commission had requested Sh8.3 billion but had been allocated Sh1 billion by the Treasury.
When
they met the Budget team, the commission cited mortgage, car loan,
committee operations, and refurbishment of buildings and payment of
rents as some of the areas that had been under-funded.
JSC BUDGET CUT
The
commission had requested Sh24.5 billion in the current financial year
but this was reduced to Sh19 billion which made it difficult to
implement plans for MPs and parliamentary staff.
According
to the commission, the bare minimum that was required in supplementary
estimates for the 2013/2014 financial year was Sh7.8 billion
.
.
Each
MP is entitled to a car loan of Sh7 million and a mortgage of Sh20
million, with each of these payable by the end of the term of
Parliament.
For mortgage, the commission had initially
asked for Sh4.5 billion and an additional Sh2.5 billion to cover the
shortfall. It requested Sh 700 million to fund car loans in the initial
Supplementary Estimates and an additional of the same amount.
PSC
had also been allocated Sh 1.4 billion in the 2013/2014 draft estimates
for construction of an office block but the Treasury struck out the
allocation.
The Judiciary on the other hand has
suffered a major cut with the committee proposing a reduction of Sh500
million from its allocation meant for construction of buildings. The
move follows recent threats by MPs to reduce budgetary allocation to the
Judiciary in the ongoing conflict about separation of powers between
the two arms of Government.
The committee further
proposes reduction of allocations to the Salaries and Remuneration
Commission meant for public sector wage conference by Sh50 million and
to the National Gender Commission meant for refurbishment of buildings
by Sh40 million.
In the report tabled before the House
by committee chairman Mutava Musyimi Tuesday, the committee said the
adjustments were guided by the need to allocate cash to priority areas.
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