President Uhuru signs into law County Revenue Allocation Bill
Money & Careers
By
PSCU
| Oct 08, 2020
President Uhuru Kenyatta has signed into law the 2020/2021 County Revenue Allocation Bill paving the way for the disbursement of exchequer funds to the Counties.
The new law allocates a sum of Sh369.87 billion in the current fiscal year to Counties and includes Sh316.5 billion of Equitable Share and Sh13.73 billion in Government of Kenya Conditional Grants.
Also included is Sh9.43 billion from the Road Maintenance/Fuel Levy as well as Sh30.2 billion in Loans and Grants.
The conditional allocation will be utilized in provision of services such as leasing of medical equipment and rehabilitation of youth polytechnics across all the 47 Counties.
The Bill was presented to the Head of State for signature by Speaker of the Senate Ken Lusaka at a ceremony attended by Speaker of the National Assembly Justin Muturi and Treasury Cabinet Secretary Ukur Yattani.
READ MORE
GMO maize to hit your plate after end of public participation
Qatar Airways ordered to refund passenger's fare
NSE lifts suspension on trading of KQ shares
Sugarcane farmers hail plan for annual bonus payout in reforms
Long-serving EADB boss exits after 17 years
Macadamia farmers accuse AFA of bias for blocking nuts export
Treasury tightens screws on State corporations in fresh revenue hunt
Report slams Parliament for weak oversight as debt chokes taxpayers
Cross-border security team steps up surveillance to tame illicit trade
National Police, Prison Services in new plan for officers' housing
Three senators from Coast have told governors to use the funds prudently after the Senate resolve the stalemate over the county revenue sharing formula.
Mombasa senator Mohamed Faki, Mr Stewart Madzayo (Kilifi) and Issa Boy of Kwale told governors to use funds for what they were intended for and avoid leakages and corruption.
At the same time, the senators called on the auditor general, the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) and the director of criminal investigation to up their game in order to fix corruption in the counties.
The senators also urged members of the public to act as whistle blowers and report when they found funds meant for projects in their areas have been embezzled.