The SRC last year gave members of county assemblies Sh2 million car
loans payable at three per cent interest per year. PHOTO | FILE
By ISAAC ONGIRI, iongiri@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The county ministers wanted their pay raised from Sh300,000 to Sh500,000 a month.
- They claimed that they left plum jobs in the private sector to work for county governments only to be offered Sh300,000 pay.
- However, the Salaries and Remuneration Commission rejected the request saying their current pay was objectively and rationally determined.
- Each of the 47 counties has about 10 executives and adding them Sh200,000 would amount to a Sh1.1 billion annual wage bill increase.
The Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC) has rejected county executives’ demand for a 66 per cent pay rise.
It would have added Sh1.1 billion to the Sh1.7 billion
annual wage bill taxpayers have been carrying since their offices were
created two and a half years ago.
The County Executive Committee (CEC) members,
commonly referred to as county ministers, had written to the SRC asking
for a pay increase.
They argued that theirs are high-risk jobs fit for better remuneration.
They argued that theirs are high-risk jobs fit for better remuneration.
The county ministers wanted their pay raised from
Sh300,000 to Sh500,000 a month (or equal to county assembly speakers) –
an amount that would have taken their annual wage bill to Sh2.8 billion a
year.
Each of the 47 counties has about 10 executives
and adding them Sh200,000 would amount to a Sh1.1 billion annual wage
bill increase.
But the SRC, through a letter dated October 26,
2015, rejected the request saying their current pay was objectively and
rationally determined.
“The commission on its 102th meeting held on
October 22, 2015 deliberated on the matter and notes that the
remunerations and benefits for County Executive Committee members was
done after a job-re-evaluation exercise,” Anne Gitau, the commission
secretary, says in a letter to the county executives.
She adds that it would be difficult to consider the request in the absence of another evaluation.
“In view of these circumstances, it will not be
prudent to revise the current salaries and benefits for County Executive
Committee (CEC) members until such a time that the commission will
review remuneration and benefits of all State Officers.”
The Commission on Revenue Allocation (CRA) has capped a CEC member’s pay at Sh368,212.
The CRA set the caps, including for governors and
members of county assembly, in a May circular to guide the counties
during budget preparations for the year to June 2016.
County ministers for finance have particularly been
agitating for a salary review, claiming that most of them left plum
jobs in the private sector to work for county governments only to be
offered Sh300,000 pay.
“Our jobs are highly risky. Threats and blackmail
from MCAs who think you earn more than them is the order of the day.
They demand bribes and tenders, making the job even much more complex.
The terms offered here are not encouraging at all,” said one county
finance executive who sought anonymity for fear of reprisals from MCAs.
The county officials have also complained that
their ‘‘low’’ pay is encouraging many senior county government officers
to do business with county governments and enhancing corruption.
Rose Kisia-Omondi, the secretary -general of the
Council of County Ministers, who has been leading the charge for
improved pay for the county ministers, has effectively suffered a
setback with the SRC’s response.
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