ALL members of Parliament, including those from Nairobi who cover
short distances, will now benefit from
mileage allowance after the Salaries
and Remuneration Commission succumbed to their demands.
The Star has established that the
commission has granted all the 416
MPs and senators a fixed mileage allowance of Sh366,011 per month.
This translates to Sh152.26 million
per month or Sh1.82 billion per year.
The revised perks mean taxpayers
will shoulder the extra burden as the
MPs in Nairobi and its environs who
cover very short distances to Parliament will also be beneficiaries.
The new mileage allowance will be
paid effective next week on April 1.
The revelation comes at a time when Kenyans are struggling with heavy
taxes, a battered economy worsened
by the high cost of living and huge
public debt is likely to trigger public uproar
against the MPs who are among the
best paid in the world.
MPs from far-flung areas will get
more benefits.
The SRC indicated that MPs whose
constituencies are more than 205km
from Nairobi will claim additional
amounts.
“Members of Parliament whose
constituency is beyond a radius of
205km from Parliament (Nairobi)
shall be paid a claimable mileage allowance of one return journey per
week from Parliament (Nairobi) to
their respective constituency/county,”
a letter by SRC to the Parliamentary
Service Commission states.
The allowance shall be paid at the
rate of Sh152.6 per kilometre for the
additional actual distance covered
over and above the 205km.
The revelations come days after
the Auditor General exposed how the
MPs could be raking in millions in
fake mileage claims.
The report revealed that Parliament – the Senate and the National
Assembly – is paying out millions to
facilitate MPs’ travel to constituencies.
Auditor General Nancy Gathungu,
in her 2023-24 audit, disclosed that
all the lawmakers do is fill a transport
claim form every month and the cash
is wired promptly to their accounts.
“The allowances were only supported by a transport claim form,”
the Auditor General says.
The PSC doesn’t demand any other documents to prove MPs travelled
to and from their constituencies – or
counties.
“There were no controls in place or
other documentary evidence to ascertain that a member travelled to warrant the payment of the allowance,”
Gathungu reveals.
Gathungu says taxpayers could be
losing hundreds of millions of shillings in questionable payments.
“In the circumstances, the lack of
internal controls in payment of claimable allowances may lead to loss of public funds,” the report reads.
Mile
-
age allowances for many MPs, espe
-
cially those from far-flung constitu
-
encies, can almost double their gross
salary.
As if that is not enough, each of the
416 will also be paid Sh356,525 per
month to maintain their vehicles over
and above the mileage allowance.
“Car maintenance allowance shall
be paid to a Member of Parliament at
the rate of Sh356,525 per month as
set and published in the gazette notice
10347 dated August 9, 2023,” the letter reads.
All the other benefits have been retained, as reiterated in the July 2024
gazette notice by the SRC, which
stayed the salary raise for public officers.
This implies that the SRC has rejected the MPs’ push for sitting allowance while in the plenary.
“This letter supersedes any other
review and setting of mileage allow
-
ance and claimable allowance for
member of parliament,” SRC said.
Parliament wrote to SRC and held
a consultative meeting with the new
SRC team in late February, after
which its request for the additional
perks was approved.
Besides these allowances, ordinary
MPs earn a gross salary of Sh725,502
monthly.
MPs get a sitting allowance in committees at a rate of Sh7,500 per sitting
up to a maximum of Sh120,000 per
month.
This means an MP from Mandera
could take home up to Sh2.4 million
every month.
The chairperson of a committee
earns Sh15,000 per sitting up to a
monthly maximum of Sh240,000;
The vice chairperson takes home
Sh12,000 per sitting up to a monthly
maximum of Sh192,000.
This is besides a medical benefit
which comprises an inpatient cover
of Sh10 million and Sh300,000 for
outpatient.
They also enjoy maternity cover of
Sh150,000, Sh100,000 for dental and
a similar amount for optical.
The annual medical package covers
the member, one spouse and up to five
children below the age of 25.
Members of the Senate and National Assembly whose duties require
more parliamentary leadership above
what is specified in their terms of service and for which they get a regular
salary may receive up to Sh150,000
per month in Special Parliamentary
Duty Allowance.
They are also entitled to a mortgage of up to Sh35 million, payable at
three per cent interest per year for the
duration of the loan.
MPs are paid a daily subsistence
allowance when travelling locally and
abroad – at very generous rates - and
a Sh15,000 airtime allowance.
They are also provided with security personnel paid for by the taxpayers.
Parliament spent a total of Sh5.8
billion on domestic travel and sub
-
sistence, from which MPs’ mileage
allowances – above Sh2 billion – were
drawn.