Teachers Threaten to Strike Over Delayed School Capitation
A teachersโ union has demanded the release of all unremitted capitation funds owed to public schools and threatened to call a strike to paralyze operations at the beginning of the second term if the government does not send the funds estimated to total Sh54 billion.
The figure has accumulated for over five years as the government has not been sending the full amount. As a result, the Kenya Union of Post Primary Education Teachers (Kuppet) yesterday rejected a reduction of the learnersโ capitation, terming the decision โgrossly immoralโ as secondary schools struggle to survive the first term.
This follows an announcement on Monday by the principal secretary for Basic Education Belio Kipsang that each learner would receive about Sh17,000 annually for tuition needs, down from Sh22,244. Schools have received Sh3,877 per learner in the first term. Schools are scheduled to close on April 5 2024 and reopen on April 29, 2024.
He blamed the inadequate funding for increasing enrolment against a constant budgeted figure.
Dr Kipsang said a total of Sh16.25 billion will be released to schools before they close. However, union officials said that a reduction of the capitation would โkill the dream of free and compulsory basic educationโ.
At the same time, the secretary-general of Kuppet Akello Misori, and the national chair Omboko Milemba called for an exhaustive audit of studentsโ data on the National Education Management Information System (Nemis) alleging that the government has been losing money funding โghost learnersโ through inflated enrolment.
โSchools will not open for the second term. It is grossly immoral to imagine a reduction in the capitation amount. At a time when Kenya is recording double-digit growth in tax revenues and allocations for renovations and foreign travel are gobbling billions of shillings, how can the government possibly not afford to allocate the resources needed to maintain the current level of capitation?โ Asked Mr Misori.
The current capitation was fixed in 2018. The official said that the Ministry of Education cannot reduce the capitation allocated to learners without seeking Parliamentary approval since the budget is allocated by the National Assembly. He was speaking during a press briefing at the union headquarters in Nairobi.
โWith three weeks left on the school term, the institutions are finding it hard to meet their daily obligations including utility bills, payment of non-teaching staff, purchase of learning materials including stationery, laboratory chemicals, teaching and learning materials, and co-curricular activities,โ Mr Misori said.
ALSO READ:
- Inside Job Exposed: Kenyan Prison Wardens Convicted for Orchestrating Daring Terrorist Escape
- Uganda Pulls the Plug: Nationwide Internet Blackout Ordered Days Before Crucial General Election
- African Elections Under the Spotlight as Zambia Turns to Kenya Ahead of 2026 Vote
- โTwo Drug Barons in Cabinet?โ Kenya Government Fires Back as Ex-Deputy President Sparks Explosive Drug Claims
- Kenyan Court Freezes Use of Private Lawyers by Government, Sparks Nationwide Legal Storm
Mr Milemba said that learning especially in day schools has been grossly affected by delays and reduction of capitation funds since the schools rely on the money for their tuition needs. This, he said, has a direct correlation to the quality of education learners receive.
In the 2023 Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) the number of candidates who scored a mean grade E rose from 30,822 to 48,174. Day schools account for the majority of grade Es.
โThe registration process on Nemis should be made easy and quick. Itโs upon the Ministry of Education to give the actual number of students who are in all schools. We demand a total audit of Nemis and capitation because we believe a lot of money is remaining at the ministry.
“Principals are being forced to write receipts of money they havenโt expended and forward while the expenditure is being done in Nairobi,โ Mr Omboko said.
Additionally, Kuppet criticized the government for terminating the EduAfya medical insurance scheme and failing to replace it with a viable alternative.
โPresident William Ruto can act on this because we have seen him confront very serious malpractices. Kuppet believes that only the President can avert further damage. We appeal directly to the President to stop the hemorrhage in the education budget,โ Mr Milemba added.
On Tuesday, the Leader of the Minority Opiyo Wandayi accused the Ministry of Education of โsetting upโ for failure principals and managers of schools.
โWeโre calling on teachers and parents to stop struggling in fear and to speak out boldly. School heads have run out of ideas to run schools without money and parents afford the money they were promised that the government would cater to. If nothing is urgently done, weโre likely to see a crisis of monumental proportions in the entire education sector,โ he said.
Teachers Threaten to Strike Over Delayed School Capitation
