KAMPALA - The Ugandan government has opened up the membership of the Parish Development Model (PDM) SACCOs to allow all parish residents to become members.
According to PDM national coordinator Dennis Galabuzi Ssozi, the move is aimed at expanding participation, strengthening accountability, and deepening grassroots ownership.
In a press briefing at the Uganda Media Centre, Galabuzi said the changes mark a fundamental shift in how parish-level financial institutions are governed.
“The PDM SACCO does not belong to any individual or group. It belongs to every resident of the parish, and it must be governed accordingly,” he said.
Under the new policy, every parish resident is now eligible to join their local SACCO, regardless of whether they belong to a registered enterprise group.
Two categories of membership have been introduced: enterprise groups (Category A), represented by their leaders, and individual members (Category B), admitted free of charge but with full voting rights.
Galabuzi described the move as a “democratic imperative”, noting that citizens who benefit from public programmes must have a direct say on how they are run.
He, however, clarified that broader membership does not translate into automatic access to government financing. Access to the Parish Revolving Fund will remain restricted to organised enterprise groups to preserve collective responsibility.
“Joining the SACCO gives you a voice in governance, not automatic access to funds,” said Galabuzi.
The reforms will be implemented through Special General Meetings across all parishes, where communities will amend SACCO by-laws, admit new members, elect vetting committees, and choose new leadership.
According to PDM national coordinator Dennis Galabuzi Ssozi, the move is aimed at expanding participation, strengthening accountability, and deepening grassroots ownership. (Credit: Nancy Nanyonga)