Summary
- The Tea Bill 2018 is one step to becoming law after the National Assembly slotted it for final scrutiny and passage on Tuesday.
- MPs will make final amendments to the Bill when they scrutinise it clause by clause during the Committee of the Whole House stage before it is forwarded to the President for assent.
- The Bill comes hot on heels on recent reforms that Agriculture Secretary Peter Munya has proposed on Kenya Tea Development Agency to boost farmers’ earnings.
Fresh changes loom in the tea industry as Parliament races to
conclude a proposed law that could radically alter the regulatory regime
of the top cash crop.
The Tea Bill 2018, which is set
to guide the development and promotion of the tea industry in Kenya, is
one step to becoming law after the National Assembly slotted it for
final scrutiny and passage on Tuesday.
MPs will make
final amendments to the Bill when they scrutinise it clause by clause
during the Committee of the Whole House stage before it is forwarded to
the President for assent.
The MPs in March concluded
debate on the Second Reading of the Bill that originated from the
Senate. The MPs will make further amendments to the Bill during its
Third Reading or final stage.
Kericho Senator Aaron
Cheruiyot published the Bill in 2018 that if President Uhuru Kenyatta
signs it into law will change the vending of tea in Kenya.
The Senate approved the Bill last year and forwarded it to the National Assembly for concurrence.
The
Bill comes hot on heels on recent reforms that Agriculture Secretary
Peter Munya has proposed on Kenya Tea Development Agency to boost
farmers’ earnings.
The Bill reintroduces the Tea Board
of Kenya (TBK) that was scrapped and collapsed into the Agriculture Food
Authority, which brought together several agencies that dealt with the
regulation of cash crops under the Agriculture Foods Authority Act of
2014.
interested parties
The revived TBK will regulate, develop and promote the production of tea in Kenya.
It
will also coordinate the activities of individuals and organisations
the tea industry as well as facilitate equitable access to the
resources, facilities and benefits of the tea industry by all interested
parties.
The Bill bars any person from exporting,
importing, marketing or processing tea or tea products unless that
person has applied for and obtained a licence from the Tea Board of
Kenya.
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