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Murkomen sets timeline for operationalising dormant administrative units

08:55 PM
Murkomen sets timeline for operationalising dormant administrative units

Interior Security and National Administration Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen has assured Kenyans that the government is going to operationalise several administrative units that have been pending for about 10 years in the 2025/2026 financial year.

Speaking on Friday, August 8, 2025, during the Jukwaa la Usalama programme in Bomet County, Murkomen regretted that some administrative units that were gazetted in 2016-2017 are still dormant.

The CS attributed the delay in operationalising the administrative units to budgetary gaps, adding that some chiefs who were hired a couple of years ago are yet to receive their salary because of these challenges.

“Part of the reason why across the country some of the administrative units that were gazetted in 2016-2017 are still pending up to now is (because of) budgetary allocations,” Murkomen said.

“And you will see even in this meeting, there are chiefs who were hired two years ago and are yet to get a salary because of budget allocations. The more you subdivide a location, the more money you need to run the new location, so some of them have been delayed.”

However, he said that his ministry is going to commence the process of operationalising these administrative units from next week on a first-in, first-out basis. 

“We have a little amount of money this financial year and we will try to operationalise based on a first-in, first-out approach so that we can sort out that issue,” he stated.

“We also want to build well-equipped police stations with proper offices, decent holding cells, and secure storage for materials, evidence, and sensitive information. We are committed to ensuring that our officers work in a conducive and dignified environment.”

Interior Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen Addressing during the Jukwaa la Usalama Bomet edition on Friday, August 8 ,2025.PHOTO/@kipmurkomen/X

Beefing security and service delivery

The Interior Security boss said that the issue of pending administrative units has been raised across almost all the counties they have visited so far in the Jukwaa la Usalama programme. 

Murkomen said that the government has also started the process of modernising police stations and building offices for administrative areas, noting that some of the buildings were built during the colonial era. 

Citing the Bomet County Commissioner’s Office, Murkomen said that there was a need to give police officers and administrative an ample environment for them to discharge their duties properly. 

We have infrastructural challenges here of our offices for administrative officers, but it is not acute, it is manageable,” he said.

“We want to construct more presentable county offices for administrators, and we believe that process will commence soon and be completed before the end of the financial year. The aim is to provide proper facilities that will help our officers carry out their responsibilities effectively. This approach will also be replicated in police stations.”

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