July 3, 2024

Reprive for civil servants as parliament rejects bill aimed at denying them allowances

3 min read
Reprive for civil servants as parliament rejects bill aimed at denying them allowances

Parliament reject bill denying civil servants acting allowances, terming it to be against the Constitution on the Employment Act

Parliament reject bill denying civil servants acting allowances, terming it to be against the Constitution on the Employment Act.

It is a big reprieve for civil servants who have acted for more than six months after MPs rejected a Bill that would have denied them allowances.

The parliament  termed such a proposal as unfair labour practices and discrimination in emploment sector.

The National Assembly Labour Committee in a report on the Public Service Commission (Amendment) Bill 2023 rejected the plan, stating that it would violate the Constitution’s Employment Act.

“The enactment of this provision would result in unfair labour practices contrary to article 27 of the Constitution on the freedom from discrimination and right to fair labour practices,” reads the report.

The committee emphasized that an employer must provide equal pay for equal effort under Section 5 of the Employment Act of 2007.

The committee instead recommended that the longest an officer can serve in an acting capacity is 12 months before the position is declared vacant and competitively filled. 

Anyone who works past that period will not be eligible for an acting allowance.

The Bill Embakasi Central MP Benjamin sponsored seeks to amend section 34 of the Act to provide for non-payment of acting allowance beyond six months, saying the period when an officer is in acting capacity is enough for any entity to recruit a suitable candidate for the position.

“The period of six months prescribed should provide adequate time for the organisation to recruit and substantively fill the position. Failure to comply with this provision will result in the officer not earning any acting allowances,” reads the Bill.

The Bill proposes that a person may be appointed in acting capacity for a period of at least 30 days but not exceeding a period of six months.

The MP argued that since retirement of all civil servants are known by the employers, the concerned entity should ensure that there are officers with similar skills to a certain one that can take over in case one retires instead of making one to service in acting capacity for more than six months.

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However, the Public Service Commission (PSC) in their submission to the committee over the proposal opposed the amendment pointing out that not all positions officers are appointed to act are available for filling.

“There are circumstances where substantive holders are lawfully authorised to be away for a period exceeding six months and therefore the post cannot be filled,” the commission told MPs.

Such circumstances according to the commission include officers on secondment, leave of absence granted to a spouse of Foreign Service officer who has been posted outside the country and staff of universities who normally take sabbatical leave for studies.

“Various universities prescribe different periods for sabbatical leave. Some have nine months, some have one year. It will not be fair to have an officer perform duties in the higher office and not be compensated,” the commission told MPs.

The commission told MPs that the primary objective for appointing an officer in acting capacity is not necessarily to earn an allowance but to ensure continuity of service delivery as the absence of the substantive office should not disrupt public service delivery.

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