“The cost of everything has gone up,” VCs want fees hiked

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Prof. Francis Aduol, the Chairman of the Vice Chancellor’s Committee,

With all the attention that universities have faced over the past few months over the “useless” courses alongside the intake numbers, Vice Chancellors now claim public universities in Kenya will not survive if they do not hike school fees three fold as earlier proposed.

This comes even after students threatened to strike and Members of Parliament (MPs) threatened to move to court to block the increment.

Despite the threats, the university administrators have however remained firm on their proposal to triple the fees saying running public universities has become a headache due to lack of resources.

According to the VCs, the government provides only Ksh.36 billion which they say is just half of what universities need.

Students during lecture at a university

“The cost of everything has gone up. If we’re going to run universities in a way that would make them competitive, we need to ensure that they are properly funded,” said Prof. Francis Aduol, the Chairman of the Vice Chancellor’s Committee.

“We can no longer work with the parameters of 1989 to run universities in 2019.”

In defending the proposal, Prof. Aduol further argued that the  government has an option of covering the proposed fees in totality if the students and parents were to be laid off the burden of digging deeper into their pockets.

Students at University of Nairobi

University students are already feeling the heat with lecturers reportedly abandoning lecture halls and, in some instances, conducting sessions halfheartedly.

The newly-proposed proposed fee structure, if approved, will see students pay an average of Ksh.48,000 per semester.

It, however, remains to be seen how the Ministry of Education will cross this bridge under a new Cabinet Secretary.

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