Allowances paid to members of county assemblies more than
doubled in six months to last December, defying an austerity drive to
curb non-essential expenditure.
Data from the
Controller of Budget (CoB) shows sitting allowances paid to MCAs
increased to Sh1.08 billion from the Sh422 million earned during the
same period the previous year.
The 156 percent rise in
sitting allowance expense comes amid an austerity push by the Treasury
to free up cash for development and essential services such as health
and education.
This means that the taxpayers’ benefits that come with the 2017 cut on State officers' perks and benefits have been wiped out.
“The
expenditure translated to 38.9 percent of the approved budget and an
increase by 156.5 percent compared to a similar period last year when a
total of Sh422 million was incurred,” said the Controller of Budget
Agnes Odhiambo in the report.
During the period under
review, the county assemblies spent Sh1.08 billion on MCAs sitting
allowances against an approved budget of Sh2.78 billion for the full
year.
In the six months to December 2017, the allowances dropped to
Sh422 million from the previous year’s Sh1.28 billion. The drop was due
to the absence of meetings before and shortly after the August 2017
General Election and the Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC) cut
on perks. In July 2017, the Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC)
abolished MCAs’ mileage reimbursements, sitting allowances for plenary
sessions and special responsibility perks.
Sh80,000
The
reviews meant that the new crop of representatives elected on August 8,
2017, were not expected to earn monthly sitting perks exceeding
Sh80,000, down from the previous Sh124,800.
In
December, the High Court overturned SRC’s decision, restoring MCA’s
allowances and wages after establishing that the SRC failed to study the
labour market and conduct a comprehensive job evaluation a year before
the pay review as the law demands.
The Controller of Budget has also restored the meeting allowance cap of Sh124, 800.
The
allowances have been on a steady rise since the MCAs took office in May
2013, causing concern that the perks were gobbling up county government
revenues, with minimal corresponding impact in terms of public service.
Sought-after job
The perks paid to MCAs had made the position the most sought-after job in Kenya’s politics.
The
sitting perk along with the basic salary, travel and airtime allowance
pushed the MCA’s monthly pay to about Sh300, 000, before SRC cut them to
about Sh200,000 monthly.
In the six months to
December, Kakamega paid its 88 MCAs an average of Sh126,699 per month,
surpassing SRC’s recommended pay of Sh124,800.
Nakuru’s
79 MCAs earned an average of Sh117,462 per month while their 39
counterparts in Vihiga took home Sh116,624 in monthly sitting allowance.
This
is in comparison to their more frugal counterparts in Baringo, Machakos
and Embu who received the least from meetings at Sh5,460, Sh27,813 and
Sh28,310 a month respectively.
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