Senators push for tough sanctions on counties over illegal bank accounts
Latest report by CoB Margaret Nyakang’o reveals devolved units operating more than 5,400 such accounts
by JULIUS OTIENO
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Senate Assembly.
Severe
sanctions loom for county governments and their officers who operate
irregularly or fail to declare bank accounts held in commercial banks.
In
a radical move, senators are recommending changes to the law to punish devolved
units and officials who open or maintain unauthorised accounts or fail to
disclose their existence to oversight institutions.
The
proposed changes would also require the Controller of Budget, Auditor-General
and Central Bank of Kenya to be granted real-time access to all county-operated
accounts.
These
are part of far-reaching measures proposed by the Senate’s Devolution and
Intergovernmental Relations Committee following its probe into the
proliferation of unauthorised bank accounts by counties.
Concerns
have been mounting over the ballooning number of illegal accounts, with the
latest report by CoB Margaret Nyakang’o revealing that counties are operating
more than 5,400 such accounts.
This
has raised fears of illegal transactions that could put billions of shillings
in public funds at risk.
In
its report, the Senate committee—chaired by Wajir Senator Mohamed
Abass—recommended a review of the Public Finance Management (National
Government) Regulations, 2015, to grant the CBK, CoB and Auditor-General
unrestricted system access to all county bank accounts.
The
committee also proposed that the revised law include clear sanctions for
non-compliance.
“This
is aimed at strengthening oversight, enhancing transparency, and safeguarding
public resources,” the report reads.
Additionally,
the committee directed the Auditor-General to audit all county commercial bank
accounts, close inactive ones, and transfer the balances to the County Revenue
Fund.
“Within
six months of the adoption of this report, the Office of the Auditor-General
shall conduct a comprehensive audit of all commercial bank accounts operated by
county governments,” the report states.
The
inquiry was triggered by recurring Auditor-General reports citing
discrepancies, non-disclosure and weak regulation of county commercial accounts
— issues that have long cast doubt on the completeness and accuracy of county
financial records.
According
to the committee, while the Public Finance Management (PFM) Act, 2012 mandates
county treasuries to open, operate and close county government bank accounts,
this leeway has been widely abused.
Sections
119(1) and 119(2) of the Act empower county treasuries to authorise such
accounts, while also requiring them to establish a County Treasury Single
Account at the CBK or another approved bank for all county payments.
This,
the committee said, was intended to allow legitimate commercial accounts under
Treasury supervision — not to create loopholes for illegal accounts.
However,
some counties have bypassed these procedures, resulting in several undisclosed
accounts and exposing public money to the risk of loss.
“This
discrepancy indicates instances of non-disclosure of bank accounts to the
Auditor-General and the Controller of Budget, thereby posing a risk to the
existence of a reliable and verified inventory of all commercial bank accounts
held by county governments,” the report warns.
The
committee further attributed the problem to inconsistencies in the PFM legal
framework, compounded by donor conditions that often require separate project
accounts.
A
key conflict lies between Regulation 82(1)(a) of the PFM (National Government)
Regulations, 2015 and Regulation 82(1)(b) of the PFM (County Governments)
Regulations, 2015.
The
national regulations allow exemptions for donor-funded projects, situations
where the CBK lacks branches, and certain revenue collection activities in
approved banks.
In
contrast, county regulations permit only petty cash imprest accounts in
commercial banks—limiting counties’ ability to manage donor and operational funds
effectively.
“The
inconsistencies in the PFM regulations disadvantage counties, particularly in
managing donor funds and operational needs,” Siaya Senator Oburu Odinga said.
The
committee found that many counties have opened multiple commercial bank accounts
to facilitate the operations of public funds, health facilities, technical and
vocational education and training centres, municipalities and donor-funded
projects.
It
directed the National Treasury and county treasuries to set clear banking rules
and maximum balance limits for all authorised accounts, in line with Regulation
82(5) of the PFM (County Governments) Regulations, 2015.
“Where
such balances appear likely to be exceeded, the responsible officer shall
promptly consult the County Treasury on the appropriate action to be taken –
thereby enhancing cash management, minimising idle balances, reducing wasteful
expenditure, and promoting accountability,” the report adds.
In
her budget implementation report for the year ending June 2025, CoB Nyakang’o
revealed that counties continue to open accounts in commercial banks without
her office’s approval, in clear violation of the PFM Act.
She
said county treasuries are required to seek authorisation and register all
commercial bank accounts with her office – a legal requirement many have
ignored.
“As
of June 30, county governments were running 5,476 accounts with commercial
banks,” Nyakang’o reported. “Most treasuries have failed to submit
authorisation letters for these accounts as mandated by the PFM Act, exposing
public funds to mismanagement and theft.”
The
report revealed wide disparities across counties. Kitui led with 350
unauthorised accounts, followed by Bungoma and Nakuru (over 300 each), Baringo
(280), Kwale (240), Machakos (231), and Embu (222).
Others
included Kericho (245), Kisumu (190), Nairobi (174), Uasin Gishu (160), Nyamira
(157), Elgeyo Marakwet (160), Kirinyaga (140), Trans Nzoia (135), Marsabit
(120) and Vihiga (121).
Smaller
figures were reported in Kiambu (75), Meru (71), Isiolo (68), Busia (57),
Kajiado (52), Makueni (45), Nyeri (32), Laikipia (32), Taita Taveta and Lamu
(37 each), Mandera (30), Samburu (24), West Pokot (24), Garissa (26), and
Turkana (26).
Tharaka
Nithi and Tana River each had 16, Siaya 15, Murang’a 20, and Nandi 10. Data for
Kilifi and Narok were not disclosed.
INSTANT ANALYSIS:
Controller
of Budget Margaret Nyakang’o warned that the proliferation of unapproved
accounts leaves devolved funds “highly vulnerable” and undermines fiscal
discipline. She reminded counties that Regulation 82(1)(b) of the PFM (County
Governments) Regulations, 2015 requires county accounts to be opened and
maintained at the CBK—except for imprest, petty cash and revenue collection
accounts. Regulation 82(4) demands written authorisation from the county treasury
before opening any commercial account, while Regulation 82(5) requires that
copies of the authorisation letters be forwarded to her office.
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