President Uhuru Kenyatta, Deputy President William Ruto and Senator Yusuf Hajj(from right to left). PHOTO | BNC |
President Uhuru Kenyatta, Deputy President William Ruto and ODM leader Odinga launched the Building Bridges Initiative at Bomas of Kenya. The Documents will be distributed across the country to the ward level where every Kenyan will have his/her views.
“The Taskforce has offered advice as per its mandate. BBI does not replace any legal or constitutional body. Its recommendations are just that: recommendations based on listening to Kenyan citizens and experts,” the briefing document says.
The BBI proposed that the Prime Minister may be dismissed by the President or through a vote of no confidence in the National Assembly.
Another proposal is that the runner-up in a Presidential election becomes an ex-officio Member of Parliament and the Leader of the Official Opposition.
However, this is if his or her party is not represented in the Government, or is the leader of a coalition of Parliamentary parties not represented in the Government.
Another proposal is that the Cabinet shall be drawn from both parliamentarians and technocrats with the latter being made ex-officio Members of Parliament upon successful Parliamentary approval.
The BBI team has also recommended that the government should immediately ban all public officers from doing business it as a way to tame corruption.
The team wants the government to reverse and vanquish the 1970 Duncan Ndegwa Commission that allowed public officers to engage in business with the government.
Ndegwa who was then the chairman of Central Bank concluded that civil servants should be allowed to engage in private business as a means of augmenting their poor pay.
This was after the late President Jomo Kenyatta administration admitted that it was unable to improve employment terms of the civil servants.
While the law currently does not allow the public officers to do business with the government, some use proxy companies to bid and lobby for multi-billion tenders.
The BBI report also proposes that counties be allocated 35 per cent of the national revenue. Currently, the Constitution provides that at least 15 per cent be allocated to the devolved units. The national government is, however, at liberty to allocate more than 15 per cent of the national revenue to the counties.
“When dividing revenues between counties, use a formula that focuses on ensuring services reach the actual settlements of people so that resources are not allocated based on an inhibited landmass,” the BBI report reads.
While noting that devolution has largely been a success, the BBI team said devolved units are still frustrated by serious challenges that need to be addressed. The report has recommended that the government builds the economy from the grassroots for Kenyans to realise meaningful development.
It said the tax base should be broadened but the overall taxation made lower relative to competitor economies regionally and globally.
“We must entirely transform the way our economy operates if we are to deal with the present lack of jobs,” the report reads.
In this regard, the BBI team said the government should empower young people to have more opportunity and income. “Minimise taxation of new and small businesses by giving them a tax holiday of at least seven years as a support to youth entrepreneurship and job creation,” the report said.
The report, however, proposed that a commission should be established to manage human resource within the health sector.
The report recommended the establishment of an independent Health Service Commission to take over from counties.
“Transfer of the health sector personnel element from county governments to an independent Health Service Commission to enable sharing of the very limited health experts,” the report stated.
Counties have been in charge of human resource management of health workers since the function was devolved at the onset of devolution in 2013. It will be a big win for women if a proposal is adopted to compel candidates vying for the governor to pick deputies of a different gender.
The Building Bridges Initiative report proposes that in future, governors and their deputy governors should be of the different gender. During the last election, only a handful of governors appointed deputies from the opposite gender.
The state should eliminate sitting allowances of public officers in both the national and the county governments, the Building Bridges Initiative task force recommends.”The Taskforce has offered advice as per its mandate. BBI does not replace any legal or constitutional body. Its recommendations are just that: recommendations based on listening to Kenyan citizens and experts,” the briefing document says.