Junior Secondary School interns secure permanent jobs after bagging Sh8.3bn funding

Starting July 1, 2024, the 26,000 teachers, who were initially slated to transition to permanent and pensionable terms in January 2025, will benefit from the new employment status.
Junior Secondary School teachers hired in January 2023 through the JSS internship programme will now be employed on Permanent and Pensionable (P&P) terms, following an intervention by the National Assembly.
The move marks a significant victory for the 26,000 teachers who have been advocating for permanent terms after the Court ruled that their employer violated their right to fair labour practices.
More To Read
- Teachers Service Commission advertises 20,000 new JSS positions
- JSS teachers push for own union, seek delinking from primary school heads
- JSS teachers seek independence from unions, blame them for neglecting their rights
- Sh7.8 billion earmarked for JSS classrooms construction - Treasury clarifies
- Grade 9 learners to receive textbooks by December 2024, publishers say
- Confirm 46,000 teachers by 2025 or face consequences - KNUT warns TSC
The decision was announced by Chair of the Education Committee Julius Melly, who confirmed that Sh8.3 billion has been allocated to support the initiative.
Starting July 1, 2024, these teachers, initially slated to transition to P&P terms in January 2025, will benefit from the new employment status.
“The Teachers Service Commission (TSC) should streamline the recruitment process to ensure that resources allocated to this function are fully utilized at the beginning of the next financial year. The commission should convert the 26,000 intern teachers to P&P terms starting July 2024 and January 2025 as earlier indicated,” Melly told the Budget and Appropriations Committee.
The announcement follows a series of demonstrations by the intern teachers, who had stopped teaching since students resumed for the second term, to demand permanent employment terms.
The controversy escalated when Justice Bryrum Ongaya of the Employment and Labour Relations Court ruled on April 18, 2024, that the TSC had violated the interns' right to fair labour practices, noting that they were qualified and held teaching licenses.
“The respondents have failed to show statutory, regulatory, or policy arrangements that allow the first respondent (TSC) to employ interns. Ideally, the TSC should hire registered teachers on fair terms to fulfil optimal staffing needs in public schools,” Justice Ongaya said.
The Teachers Internship Programme, which began in 2019, has faced criticism for the low pay offered to interns, with secondary school teachers earning Sh20,000 and primary teachers Sh15,000 per month.
After statutory deductions, which now include the recently introduced Housing Levy, primary school interns take home around Sh13,000—a figure that has remained constant for the last 15 months.
The developments are a response to the grievances and the legal challenges posed by the Forum for Good Governance and Human Rights.
The change aims to address the staffing crisis in Junior Secondary Schools, ensuring that teaching activities resume smoothly and that qualified teachers receive fair compensation for their work.
Top Stories Today
- Boda boda rider in MP Were murder arrested in Nairobi's Kibera Darajani
- President Ruto in trouble with US Senators over China remarks
- Smart tips for navigating Eastleigh’s BBS Mall, region’s largest shopping centre
- Samsung dominates Kenya’s smartphone market as Tecno slips
- Global internal displacement reaches record 83.4 million by end of 2024
- Over 100,000 small businesses to benefit from Sh28bn grant
- AU aims for 60 per cent local vaccine production by 2040
- World Bank: Africa risks missing growth dream over conflict, weak reforms
- Petition seeks DCJ Mwilu’s ouster over judges' appointment in Gachagua case
- Budget cuts jeopardise education as key programmes struggle
- Taita Taveta launches policy to attract investors, boost local economy
- How Sixth Street has transformed to become Eastleigh's leading vegetable market
- Tanzania nullifies Chadema appointments over quorum breach
- TSC budget shortfall leaves 20,000 intern teachers in limbo
- Victims of human-wildlife conflict urged to claim compensation
- Eastleigh hawkers count losses as rains disrupt business for third day
- Lobby groups urge activation of victim protection fund to protect children
- Deputy Governors seek constitutional changes to have clear mandates
- Funding shortfall leaves Somali women, children facing death
- City Hall to freeze accounts, auction properties over Sh50bn arrears