Homa Bay County Deputy Governor Hamilton Orata being registered for Huduma Namba at the county headquarters today. He has said the county employees who fail to be enlisted will lose their jobs. [James Omoro, Standard]

Homa Bay County Government employees who fail to register for Huduma Namba will lose their jobs.

Deputy Governor Hamilton Orata said they will use Huduma Namba to audit their payroll.

Speaking when he registered for the number at the county headquarters, Orata said any county employee who fails to register for the number will be considered a ghost worker.

“Any employee who wants to continue working with the county government must register for Huduma Namba. A person whose details fail to feature in the National Integrated Identity Management System (NIIMS) will be removed from the payroll,” said Orata.

Orata said the NIIMS will help them to reduce the wage bill by weeding out ghost workers and any other persons with double salaries.

 “Somebody might be using different names to get double pay. We are going to use the Huduma Namba in streamlining our payrolls to weed out ghost workers,” Orata said.

The deputy governor said the county is currently suffering from a huge wage bill due to the high number of employees. This raises suspicion that the county might have ghost workers in the payroll.

The deputy governor added that the NIIMS will also prevent payment of salaries to deceased workers.

The County Commissioner Irungu Macharia said they had developed mobile Huduma Namba registration to enable them meet a target of 1.6 million people.

Macharia said they were taking registration kits to health facilities, trading centres and learning institutions.

“We used to have challenges of network and shortage of forms but the exercise is now moving smoothly. The clerks have registered 26 percent of the county population,” Macharia said.