NEWS ANALYSIS- UPDATED

By Anchor Writer

The unraveling state of solid waste management in Machakos County reflects more than a budgetary dilemma—it is a symptom of institutional decay and blurred policy priorities.

The slashing of fuel and equipment budgets from Kes 45 million to Kes 17 million—reportedly without institutional or stakeholder consultation—highlights governance challenges in county finance management.

These cuts have crippled a critical public service, ironically at a time when urbanization and population growth are pushing waste generation to new highs.

This crippling directly undermines Governor Wavinya Ndeti’s campaign mantra—Chakula Mezani, Pesa Mfukoni—because a degraded environment can neither support food production nor wealth creation.

Mavoko, the industrial hub of the county, suffers the most under this irregular policy shift, occasioned by unproven fears that fuel money is being embezzled. Moreover, no one has been held to account, let alone arrested or prosecuted for the alleged embezzlement.

Mavoko produces 170 tonnes of waste daily, including hazardous materials from factories, yet lacks a gazetted dumpsite or a functional waste management system.

We are in the 13th year of devolution. The previous administration had 10 years to identify a dumpsite, while the current one is about to squander a third year. All we hear now are cries over grabbed land—yet establishing a dumpsite remains a non-priority.

This scenario poses serious environmental and public health risks, especially in the low-income settlements of this municipality.

Governor Wavinya Ndeti’s administration appears to have prioritized short-term youth engagement programs like Ngarisha Mtaa over institutional capacity building.

While such programs may earn short-term political goodwill—especially with Gen Zs—their temporary nature, high cost, and lack of sustainability raise questions about their intent and effectiveness.

Among staff, it is viewed as a program with a low accountability threshold, conveniently aligning with the county’s appetite for public funds.

Departmental staff who have served since the days of Local Authorities now fear for their jobs. They believe the administration has long prepared to secretly privatize garbage collection—possibly at triple the cost of current public operations—thus opening another avenue for graft. If true, this raises serious concerns about accountability, transparency, and the public interest in service delivery.

The apparent disappearance of bins, withdrawal of machinery, and decay of dumpsite infrastructure point to systemic neglect of environmental health.

This neglect directly violates both constitutional and statutory environmental obligations that the county government owes its residents.

Moreover, the failure to implement waste sorting and recycling represents lost economic opportunities—highlighting that growing revenue streams is not among the administration’s priorities.

With better policy and investment, waste could create jobs and generate income—transforming a burden into a resource.

Under the prevailing circumstances, Machakos is sliding toward environmental collapse. Without a radical shift in policy, governance, and funding priorities, residents may soon find themselves literally living in filth—courtesy of government inertia.

The crisis created under the watch of Finance Minister Onesmus Kuyu can only be addressed through a supplementary budget. Ironically, this would involve Kuyu reallocating funds from other vote lines to the same fuel budget he previously slashed.

Matters are further complicated by the state of the Machakos County Assembly, which has been shut for over a month—making any budget variations impossible at the moment.

Clearly, the complications facing Governor Wavinya are far from over.

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