The state just admitted that free education is basically a myth because the money ran out. William Ruto stood in Nakuru County and declared that parents must chip in since the budget cannot cover every learner. He insisted families need to handle small costs despite a funding jump to KSh 700 billion.
The leader argued that totally free learning almost destroyed universities previously when the treasury lacked sufficient muscle. He claimed that the economy must grow stronger before the government can pay for everything. Ruto stressed that this requires a partnership between the state and guardians to keep systems running.
Ndindi Nyoro is absolutely losing it over this situation after seeing the numbers. The Kiharu legislator blasted the administration for sending a measly KSh 109 per student recently. He feels this tiny amount leaves institutions unable to function while officials spread misleading stories about disbursement.
The politician vowed to expose these gaps to everyone involved before things get worse. He threatened to organize mass action if proper capital fails to arrive before the semester breaks for halftime. Nyoro believes taxpayers deserve better since basic knowledge is a right protected by law.
The leader argued that totally free learning almost destroyed universities previously when the treasury lacked sufficient muscle. He claimed that the economy must grow stronger before the government can pay for everything. Ruto stressed that this requires a partnership between the state and guardians to keep systems running.
Ndindi Nyoro is absolutely losing it over this situation after seeing the numbers. The Kiharu legislator blasted the administration for sending a measly KSh 109 per student recently. He feels this tiny amount leaves institutions unable to function while officials spread misleading stories about disbursement.
The politician vowed to expose these gaps to everyone involved before things get worse. He threatened to organize mass action if proper capital fails to arrive before the semester breaks for halftime. Nyoro believes taxpayers deserve better since basic knowledge is a right protected by law.