The government has blocked a Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) meeting that MCAs had planned for Friday at the Bomas of Kenya, citing the surge in Covid-19 numbers.
2,237 MCAs and 47 Assembly Speakers had planned the meeting to take a common stand on the BBI report, keen to use their strategic advantage to demand the inclusion of their issues in the final report before the collection of the required one million signatures.
For the BBI Referendum Bill to advance to the next stage, it has to be passed by at least 24 county assemblies. If less than 24 endorse it, the Bill ends there – giving MCAs the best chance to push for their agenda now in exchange for their support.
“We note your request to be allowed to convene a Special Annual General Meeting on November 13, 2020 at the Bomas of Kenya. However, due to the noticeable surge in Covid-19 infections, the resultant increase in the positivity rate, and with respect to the reviewed protocols and guidelines on the pandemic, your request to convene the meeting has not been granted,” the ministry of Interior said in a November 11 letter to the MCAs body.
The Nation understands that the County Assemblies Forum (CAF), a body that brings together all MCAs in Kenya, is currently meeting at a Nairobi hotel to review the developments and is expected to issue a statement this afternoon.
Role of MCAs on BBI
CAF Secretary General Kipkirui Chepkwony confirmed that the lobby group had received the letter and was planning its next move.
“MCAs are big stakeholders on BBI and they will play a very important role. Since the requirement is for at least 24 assemblies to pass before it can to the next stage, we are meeting, all the MCAs in Kenya, in Bomas on Friday to build consensus on how we will handle BBI,” Mr Chepkwony told the Nation in an interview on Wednesday.
In their presentations to the BBI team during the report’s validation process, MCAs called for a provision to establish the County Assembly Fund to exist alongside the County Revenue Fund.
As it stands, all the 47 counties have one account at the National Treasury operated and managed by the county finance team under the governor.
This, the MCAs say, allows governors to use this immense power to attempt to dangle carrots at them in exchange for provision of funds.
The MCAs lobby group argues that the ward representatives had been forced to beg for funds allocated to them following the provision that only after the sign-off by the County Finance committee minister can the county assembly asses their funds.
The MCAs said they had hired a consultant to pore through the report, guide the ward representatives on what the various provisions on devolution and their roles mean.
CAF had formed a 13-member team, chaired by immediate former chairman and Kajiado Assembly Speaker Johnson Osoi, to analyse the BBI report and come up with a common stand.
MCAs have also indicated that they will demand for facilitations similar to those accorded to MPs like increased allowances and additional staff before supporting the BBI process.
While it is not a provision of the BBI, the MCAs also want the report amended to delete a provision in a 2017 amendment of the election laws that requires MCAs to have a university degree to be qualified to run for office in 2022.
They argue that academic papers do not translate to good leadership.
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