Thursday, January 18, 2024 – President William Ruto’s State House is in the spotlight for the wrong reasons.
This is after it
emerged that it paid a whopping 483 ghost workers even as the country struggles
with the ballooning wagebill.
A new report by the
Public Service Commission (PSC) reveals that State House registered an excess
of 483 employees on its payroll but not recorded on the approved staff
register, ranking among the list of public organisations with the highest
discrepancies in staff distribution.
The report, which
evaluated the status of compliance by 289 public entities in line with the
Constitution in the Financial Year 2022/2023, highlighted six organisations
that had an excess of over 100 members of staff.
New Kenya Cooperative
Creameries recorded the highest disparity, with an excess staff of 492 in the
past year, followed by State House with 483 excess staff.
Other organisations
include the Kenya Medical Supplies Authority (KEMSA) with 115, The State
Department for Higher Education (69), The State Department for Devolution (61)
and The State Department for Immigration (59).
The four organisations
listed above also recorded excess staff in the 2021/2022 report, a clear
indication that the public entities did not implement the recommendations
stipulated by the PSC.
Overall, 12
organisations were recorded operating with less than 70 per cent of the
approved staff levels while four operated with 10 per cent or less.
These included the
Uwezo Fund (98 per cent), Huduma Kenya Secretariat (94 per cent), Hydrologists
Registration Board (92 per cent), and Kenya Veterinary Board (90 per cent).
In the past year,
the total number of approved vacancies was 330,469 out of which
240,166 (72.7 per cent) were filled while 90,303 (27.3 per cent) remain vacant.
This marked an
increase of 14,384 (6 per cent) in the filled posts compared to the 2021/2022
financial year.
In total, there was an
excess of 19,467 members of staff recorded in the staff registers against those
reported in the approved filled vacancies.
The Kenyan DAILY POST
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