Officials from Kira Municipality have come under scrutiny from Parliament’s Public Accounts Committee (Local Government), chaired by Gilbert Olanya, over the slow recovery of funds disbursed under the Parish Development Model (PDM).

Led by Town Clerk, Benon Yiga, the officials appeared before the committee on Wednesday, 25 March 2026, to respond to queries raised by the Auditor General for the financial year ending June 30, 2025.
Legislators expressed concern that the programme risks following the same troubled path as past revolving funds, including the Youth Livelihood Programme (YLP).
At the centre of the probe was the municipality’s failure to recover funds already issued to beneficiaries, despite the lapse of grace periods for some recipients.
“We are happy that you appreciate the PDM and are even asking for more resources,” Olanya said. “But up to now, you have never recovered any money out of PDM. Do you think this money will be recovered?”
He emphasised that although the funds are disbursed as grants to parishes, they are loans to individual beneficiaries and must be repaid to sustain the revolving model.
“This money is not for free and the beneficiary must return that loan so that it helps other beneficiaries in that parish,” he added.
Committee members warned that failure to enforce recovery early could undermine the entire programme. Emmanuel Ongierthor (FDC, Jonam County) stressed that government funding is finite and must revolve within communities.
“At some point we are going to be looking at recovery, more than having to get money from government. If we do not act from the beginning, we will fall into the other problem… this money really must help people,” Ongierthor said.
Data presented by Kira Municipality showed that out of approximately Shs2 billion disbursed, only about Shs67.4 million had been recovered. Legislators noted that by the time of the audit, at least Shs309 million should have been recovered from beneficiaries whose grace periods had expired.
Pressed for clarity, PDM Focal Point Person, Ronald Kagolo, who is also the Kira Municipality Commercial Officer admitted recovery had been slow but said efforts were underway to improve the system.
“For example… Bweyogerere has recovered Shs8.5 million, Kyaliwajjala Shs7.4 million… in total, that is Shs67.4 million,” Kagolo said.
