17.9 C
Nairobi
Saturday, November 16, 2024
17.9 C
Nairobi
Saturday, November 16, 2024

Sacco members money protected in new law

 Kenya’s Cabinet has approved amendments to the Savings and Credit Co-operative Societies (Sacco) Act, which seeks to establish a deposit insurance fund to protect members of collapsed credit unions.

  According to the Sacco Societies Regulatory Authority (SASRA), all required changes to the law have received approval from the Cabinet and are only waiting to be tabled in parliament.

 “We are moving on well. The amendments to the Act have been approved by the Cabinet and we are waiting for approval from parliament,” said Peter Njuguna, SASRA Chief Executive.

 The Sacco Act Section 55 provides the establishment of a Deposit Guarantee Fund for the Sacco sector to provide compensation for loss of members’ deposits but not shares up to KSh 100,000 if the Society collapses.

 This amount will be the total account balance minus any liability that a member owes the Sacco and will be treated as a protected deposit.

 A member’s deposits will settle any liabilities owed by the Sacco Society under liquidation, including any liability under a loan guarantee by such a member.

 Suppose a member has unpaid loans or has been given credit facilities that have yet to be settled. In that case, the member or guarantor’s deposits, as the case may be, will repay the loan or credit advances before any payments from the deposit guarantee fund are paid for the protected deposits.

 A member of a Sacco Society that has become insolvent can lodge a claim with SASRA for payment out of the Deposit Guarantee Fund of any protected deposits, which would but for the insolvency, have been paid had this member demanded it from the insolvent Society.

 The amended Sacco Societies Act states that the Deposit Guarantee Fund will be run by a Board of Trustees comprising the Chair and CEO of SASRA, Principal Secretary at the National Treasury, CBK Governor, Commissioner for Co-operatives, and four members nominated by Saccos and appointed by the Treasury CS.

 The Board will be chaired by a person elected among its members.

 The Sacco Deposit Guarantee Fund shall be financed through contributions from Saccos, investment income, borrowings, donations, and grants.

 The Board of Trustees will, before paying any claim lodged, require the claimant to furnish such documentary proof to support such claim from SASRA.

 The Board of Trustees can decline to settle any claims to any person it suspects had any role in bringing down the Sacco or stood to benefit from its demise.

 The Fund’s trustees can also inspect a Sacco to determine the value of its protected deposits or type.

 A claim to a member of a collapsed Sacco can only be paid two years after the Board of trustees begins the process.

  A claim brought a year after the Board of Trustees begins the process will not be allowed.

  All Sacco Societies will be contributors to the Deposit Guarantee Fund and shall pay such an annual amount into the Deposit Guarantee Fund; at such times, the Board of Trustees and the CS may determine and publish in the Kenya Gazette.

 This amount and the period will not be more than 21 days after a notice is issued to the Sacco Society.

 A Sacco society which for any reason, fails to pay its contribution to the Fund within the period specified in a notice issued will be liable to pay to the Fund a penalty interest charge not exceeding one-half percent of the unpaid amount for every day outside the notice period on which the amount remains unpaid.

 Suppose a Sacco Society is being mismanaged; in that case, the trustees may require the affected Sacco to make more contributions than the amounts gazetted.

 This section of the law will check influential Sacco board directors, who wield enormous clout in the Society and involve themselves in running daily operations of a Sacco-which is against the law.

 The law also requires that the Board of Trustees submitted to the Cabinet Secretary a report on the Deposit Guarantee Fund’s operations within three months after the close of each financial year.

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Stay Connected

110,320FansLike
33,000FollowersFollow
155,100FollowersFollow
- Advertisement -spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest Articles

This will close in 0 seconds