By MUGAMBI MUTEGI, pmutegi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Prof Jacob Kaimenyi last year capped annual secondary school fees at Sh9,374 for day scholars, Sh53,553 for boarding and Sh37,210 for special needs schools.
- The fees guidelines, however, allowed schools to charge Form two, three and four students extra fees for projects that had already been approved.
- Secondary school heads are now exploiting this leeway to issue hefty fee demands on parents and introduce new project charges.
Secondary schools are taking advantage of a loophole
in the fees guidelines issued by former Education secretary Jacob
Kaimenyi to raise charges above the recommended ceilings, piling
financial burden on parents who also have to pay higher prices for books
and uniforms.
Prof Kaimenyi in February last year capped annual secondary
school fees at Sh9,374 for day scholars, Sh53,553 for boarding and
Sh37,210 for special needs schools, in a bid to tame the haphazard
increases effected by the institutions every year.
The fees guidelines, however, allowed schools to
charge Form two, three and four students extra fees for ongoing
infrastructure and transport projects that had already been approved.
Secondary school heads are now exploiting this leeway to issue hefty fee demands on parents and introduce new project charges.
“We have sampled fee structures from 100 schools in
all 47 counties and it is apparent that head teachers are openly
defying the government’s guideline,” said Musau Ndunda, the Kenya
National Association of Parents secretary general.
Mr Ndunda says some of the fee structures in their
possession show some schools charging students as much as Sh82,000 per
year, well above the recommended amount.
The learning are separating the “actual fee” and
“project costs,” making sure that the former amount is within the
Sh53,553 limit but lumping other costs under the development bracket.
School fees structures seen by the Business Daily
show that at State House Girls for example, parents of ongoing students
are being asked to pay Sh53,554 in fees but underneath this column is
an “ongoing projects” entry that carries an extra charge of Sh16,600.
Parents with students in Kiaguthu Boys High School
in Murang’a County have been asked to part with approximately Sh10,000
each to apparently offset a defaulted commercial bank loan that was used
to build a dormitory block.
The fees guidelines, which banned non-essential
charges like teacher motivation and education improvement, seems to have
left an unguarded loophole that schools are now using to squeeze cash
from parents.
Mr Ndunda says his organization is preparing to
face off with the government (and schools) in court over the continued
“exploitation” of parents through charging of “exorbitant” fees.
“We have instructed our lawyers to compile this
information with a view of filing a case in court in the coming days. We
have to put a stop to this once and for all.”
New Education secreatry Fred Matiang’i last week
said the government is going to look at the school fees guidelines
afresh while also coming up with a final Form one selection criteria “to
ensure that young people access education.”
Julius Melly, the vice chairperson of the Education
committee in Parliament, said the government needs to fully implement
the “sufficient” laws that are in place to curb the perennial problem of
arbitrary school fees increments.
As parents prepare to cough out tens of thousands of
shillings in fees, their situation has been aggravated by increased
costs of textbooks and school uniforms.
Retail outlets in Nairobi have raised the prices of key
learning items by double digits, with traders citing the steady increase
in the cost of living and of doing business in the city as the main
cause.
The Kenya Publishers Association (KPA) has, for
instance, raised the cost of 200 titles of State-approved textbooks by
up to 10 per cent, citing higher production costs— particularly the
weakened shilling.
The publishing industry lobby says that higher
energy and labour costs over the past one year had also forced them to
pass on the extra cost to consumers.
In September 2013 the government slapped a 16 per
cent VAT levy on textbooks, making Kenya one of the few countries in the
world that charges a tax on school books.
“The increment of between four and 10 per cent has
been effected on about 200 books to recoup their cost of production
which is spread over about three years,” said the KPA chairman David
Waweru in an interview.
“Failure to implement the increment would see such
books go missing from bookshelves.” School uniform retailers have also
increased the cost of essential items, laying the ground for an
expensive back-to-school affair for parents and guardians beginning this
week.
The Business Daily visited several uniform
stores in Nairobi’s CBD and found that the retailers had raised the
costs of shorts, ties, sweaters and shirts by between Sh75 and Sh200
each.
A major uniform shop, with branches on River Road
and Moi Avenue, had increased the price of a pair of shorts to Sh640, up
from Sh565 a year ago.
The pupil is also required to wear a shirt now
priced at Sh520 – up 25.3 per cent from Sh415 in January and Sh340 a
year before that.
The price of a school sweater is up 10.1 per cent
to Sh1,140 while a pair of socks and a tie retained their price tags of
Sh255 and Sh150 respectively.
The new prices mean that a parent buying three
pairs of uniform for a pupil in this school must part with Sh8,115 up
from Sh7,230 at the beginning of the year, or a 12.2 per cent price
hike.
This amount is exclusive of the cost of shoes as well as of sports gear required for physical training.
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