Ministers and senior public servants using their official vehicles to run personal errands should beware. The cars will be impounded and the officers surcharged for abuse of office, according to new measures to check government spending.
Recruitment of staff has been temporarily stopped as is the purchase of furniture, computers and other office equipment.
Under the new expenditure control measures meant to free more money for basic services, training of civil servants and other public officials in foreign countries has been banned.
Finance permanent secretary Joseph Kinyua announced the measures in a circular dated December 22, 2011. He ordered the impounding of government vehicles found on the roads before 8am and after 5pm and on weekends.
Ministers, assistant ministers and permanent secretaries would be allowed to use their official vehicles on weekends only when on official duty.
Mr Kinyua directed the Government Vehicle Check Unit to impound vehicles being used outside official working hours without necessary authority. Drivers and officers who contravene the directive will be surcharged.
The order comes less than a year after the government awarded civil servants commuter allowances.
The aim was to reduce the cost of transport and related expenses of picking up and dropping off officers entitled to official transport.
Spotted on the roads
“Contrary to this, there is a general increase in the number of government vehicles spotted on the roads,” Mr Kinyua warned. “Any officer receiving commuter allowance and continues to use government transport outside official working hours will be surcharged and lose equivalent of one month’s allowances.”
In the Commitment and Expenditure Control Measures circular, Mr Kinyua announced that ministerial delegations abroad shall not exceed five people. Delegations led by permanent secretaries or parastatal chiefs will not exceed three members.
All other government officials travelling abroad will fly economy class, except ministers, permanent secretaries and parastatal bosses.
Mr Kinyua banned domestic travel and related expenditures.
Mr Kinyua banned domestic travel and related expenditures.
“We have noted instances where officers arrange for domestic travel and accommodation from one town to another for the purpose of discussing strategy documents, consultants’ reports or even other assignments that would ordinarily be done in the office.
“Such expenditures are hard to justify and should be discouraged at all times,” he said.
Also banned are breakfast meetings organised in hotels and funded by the Exchequer. The Treasury chief directed officers from ministry headquarters to delegate field activities such as official opening of workshops to those in counties to cut on trips. Source

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