By GERALD ANDAE, gandae@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The allocation means legislators will have Sh539,000 per month to pay their workers.
- The MPs have been pushing for their personal drivers to be included in the scheme, granting them an allowance and salaries.
Parliament has increased the pay allocation for
workers attached to MPs by nearly a billion shillings for the coming
financial year, offering room for the lawmakers to hire more staff.
Budget estimates presented to Parliament show that the money
for temporary workers in constituency offices will be increased to
Sh2.26 billion from the current Sh1.3 billion.
The additional cash will allow MPs to hire more staff and raise the salaries of support staff attached to them.
The pay allocation for staff allocated to senators
increased to Sh513.6 million from Sh490 million, representing a 4.6 per
cent rise.
Salaries of staff employed by MPs are met by
taxpayers through a constituency staffing scheme mooted in 2005, adding
to their comfort given their position among the best paid legislators in
Africa.
The scheme provides for taxpayers to pay salaries
of personal assistants, office managers, secretaries and assistants as
well as allowances for police officers attached to legislators.
It capped the wage bill of elected MPs’ staff at
Sh195,000 per month and Sh97,500 for nominated members – putting the
total wage bill at Sh792 million for the 349 MPs.
This means that the cap was quietly reviewed now
that MPs on average have Sh539,000 per month for their staff pay. The
legislators have been pushing for their personal drivers to be included
in the scheme, granting them an allowance and salaries.
This would put them at the same level as security
officers attached to MPs who earn a minimum monthly stipend of Sh19,000
besides their pay.
The Parliamentary Service Commission also increased
the allocation for running Parliament’s constituency offices from Sh975
million to Sh2.1 billion with senators being the biggest beneficiaries.
Senators’ allocation increased to Sh1.18 billion from Sh105 million while for MPs it rose to Sh1 billion from Sh870 million.
MPs are entitled to a tax-free car grant, mileage allowances, pension and unlimited committee sessions.
Though each of the 416 members of the National
Assembly and the Senate earns a basic monthly salary of slightly above
Sh550,500, the allowances push their monthly take-home to more than Sh1
million.
Politicians argue that they deserve the high compensation because constituents expect them to provide charitable support.
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