By ALPHONCE SHIUNDU ashiundu@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Friday, May 24 2013 at 12:53
Posted Friday, May 24 2013 at 12:53
The
Senate has allocated Sh48 billion more to the county governments above
the Sh210 billion that the National Treasury had earmarked for the
devolved units.
The senators approved the increase when
they amended the Division of Revenue Bill, thus raising the shareable
revenue among counties from Sh190 billion to Sh238 billion.
The approval was unanimous.
“It
is our feeling that there’s no way that 190 billion can sustain the
counties,” said Billow Kerrow, the chairman of the House Committee on
Finance, Commerce and Economic Affairs.
The
decision comes just two days after the senators met the Cabinet
Secretary of the Treasury, Henry Rotich, and within hours after senators
met some governors, plus the officers from the Parliamentary Budget
Office to get their views on the provisions of the Bill.
With
the new allocations, the county governments will get almost three times
the minimum amount due to them as prescribed in the Constitution. The
Constitution prescribes a minimum of 15 per cent of revenues be given to
the counties. The new allocation shows the percentage at 42.9 per cent.
“National
government will not be deprived of resources, because they are likely
to raise more resources in the next financial year,” said Kipchumba
Murkomen, the chairman of Devolved Government Committee.
The
Senate also amended the Bill to ensure that where the county
governments are unable to have the money, then, they will get the help
of the national government to do the job.
“Where
the allocation of monies to a county results in a county being
allocated an amount that is less than the amount commensurate to the
cost of functions devolved to the county, the national government shall
provide to such county an allocation amounting to the difference
between the cost of the functions devolved to the county and the
allocated amount,” read the new provision approved in the Bill.
The
way the senators amended the Bill leave the National Treasury with no
room to negotiate the disbursement of money to the county governments.
If enacted the way it is, Mr Rotich –who has already said that the
Treasury has reached the borrowing limits—will have to find a way to
generate the extra money.
At the same
time, senators queried the relevance of a Cabinet Secretary in charge
of devolution, but Mr Murkomen said the new cabinet secretary will not
issue orders to the governors or to the county governments.
"If
she dared to interfere with the work of the governors and county
governments, she will be violating the provisions of the Constitution
that the two levels of government are distinct and interdependent. If
any governor takes orders from the Cabinet Secretary, he will be acting
illegally,” said Mr Murkomen.
Mr
Murkomen said so to quell fears among senators that the new ministry was
meant to frustrate the devolution of power and resources from the
national government to county governments.
“You
can’t say that when you name a ministry as the ministry of devolution,
you are interfering with the counties, no, that is not true. Devolution
is not a confine of any level of government”.
Dr
Boni Khalwale (Kakamega) raised the issue in the Senate saying the
domain of devolution was with the counties, and the national government
had no role in the devolved governments.
The
Leader of Minority Party in the Senate, Moses Wetang’ula (Bungoma),
also weighed in saying the Jubilee government was reluctant to implement
devolution and that’s why it had created “a ministry at the centre to
keep on interfering with the functions of the county governments”.
"I find it an amorphous ministry. It has no role in the name that it has adopted,” said Wilfred Machage, the Kuria Senator.
Mr Murkomen said devolution as per the Constitution was the role of the counties and also the role of the national government.
“The
national government and the county governments must respond to
devolution in the manner in which they operate…The idea is to take
services closer to the people,” said Mr Murkomen.
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