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Course regrets? KUCCPS assures students revision of university courses possible up to second year

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Form Four leavers who may not have revised their university course choices before the closure of the application window on Friday need not panic, as they will still have an opportunity to switch programmes after admission, the Kenya Universities and Colleges Central Placement Service (KUCCPS) has said.

KUCCPS chief executive officer Mercy Wahome said students can transfer to different courses for up to two years after joining university, allowing them to pursue programmes that better align with their interests, talents and career aspirations.

The placement agency had on May 16 issued a second call for revisions of degree courses and fresh applications for students seeking placement in universities and Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) institutions. The revision window closes at midnight on May 22.

Speaking during the Sema na Spox, Bonga na Gava podcast hosted by Government Spokesperson Isaac Mwaura, Wahome said KUCCPS is committed to ensuring learners find pathways that enable them to realise their full potential rather than feeling trapped in careers they do not enjoy.

Drawing from her own career journey, she encouraged students to choose courses based on passion and personal strengths rather than peer pressure or external influence.

“There’s that thing that you do every day, are you getting any happiness in what you do? I was not but I knew I wanted to work with people on a daily basis,” Wahome said, reflecting on her early years in the health sector.

She revealed that she initially trained in community oral health and worked as an oral health officer before realising her interests lay elsewhere.

“The reasons that kept me in KMTC is not because I loved what I was doing, but because of my friends and relationships that I had established in KMTC,” she said.

“That’s one of the reasons I’m very passionate with what I do — choosing careers based on what you are good at, your passion, your gifts and not peer influence,” she told the forum attended by university students from across the country.

Wahome said it took years for her to recognise that her strengths were more aligned with the social sciences than the medical profession.

The realisation prompted her to return to school and pursue an undergraduate degree in sociology and communication.

“By the time I realised I’m more of a social scientist than a medical person, it took some time,” she said.

The decision, she noted, transformed her career trajectory and eventually led her to pursue a Master’s degree in Medical Sociology, enabling her to combine her healthcare background with her newfound academic interests.

“After that I immediately registered for my Masters and did a Masters in Medical Sociology. I felt there was an opportunity to connect the medical background I had and the sociology that I had gained and I loved what I did,” Wahome said.

She used her experience to reassure students that changing academic direction is possible and should not be viewed as a failure, especially when it helps them pursue careers they find meaningful and fulfilling. She said while pursuing sociology, some of her colleagues who chose pathways like dentistry thought she was lost but she kept at it because it’s what she was passionate about. “There’s no course that is useless,” she emphasised.

On the placement process itself, Wahome said KUCCPS operates a fully automated system designed to ensure transparency and fairness, adding that no applicant can be placed in a programme they did not indicate during the application process.

According to her, students are given four programme choices, increasing their chances of securing placement in courses they prefer while maintaining merit-based selection.

“But if we get to your fourth choice but the cut-off points lock you out, we give you another option, we ask you, ‘in case you don’t get any of these, can we place you in any other programme?’” she explained.

Where a student agrees to alternative placement, the system analyses the applicant’s strongest subjects and matches them with available programmes for which they qualify.

“It’s a yes or no question. If the student says yes, the system looks at the best subjects and places them in the most suitable available programme,” she said.

However, Wahome stressed that such placement does not permanently lock students into a particular course.

“That doesn’t mean after we conclude all that process, you can’t pick something else. We give you an opportunity to revise, to transfer and we allow students up to two years,” she said.

The KUCCPS boss also dismissed concerns about a shortage of university spaces for the 2025 Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) cohort.

She said the country currently has adequate capacity to absorb all students who attained the minimum university entry grade.

According to KUCCPS data, about 270,000 candidates qualified for university admission in the 2025 KCSE examinations, while universities collectively have approximately 320,000 available slots across more than 40 public and private institutions.

“So capacity is not an issue,” Wahome said, urging eligible candidates who are yet to apply or revise their choices to take advantage of the placement window before it closes-STAR.

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National Assembly dismisses claims Sacco Bill is being rushed through Parliament

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The National Assembly has dismissed reports that the Sacco Societies (Amendment) Bill, 2025, is being rushed through Parliament, saying the proposed law is still undergoing public participation.

Through infographics shared on Facebook on Tuesday, July 14, 2026, Parliament said misleading information had been circulating online about the Bill, formally known as the Sacco Societies (Amendment) Bill, National Assembly Bill No. 32 of 2025.

Bill was published in June 2025

The National Assembly said the Bill was published on June 30, 2025, and had remained under consideration for more than 12 months.

It rejected suggestions that lawmakers were fast-tracking the proposed amendments without allowing enough time for scrutiny.

According to Parliament, the lengthy period between the publication of the Bill and its current consideration shows that it is not being rushed.

Bill currently before the National Assembly committee

The Sacco Societies Amendment Bill is currently before the National Assembly’s Departmental Committee on Trade, Industry and Cooperatives.

The committee is conducting public participation and receiving views from members of the public and other stakeholders.

The submissions are expected to help the committee assess the proposed amendments before presenting its recommendations to the National Assembly.

What happens after public participation?

After the public participation process is concluded, the committee will prepare a report containing its findings and recommendations.

Parliament said the views submitted by members of the public and stakeholders could inform further amendments to the Bill.

The proposed legislation will then proceed to the National Assembly for consideration by MPs.

This means the Bill has not yet completed the legislative process and could still be amended based on the submissions received during public participation.

Bill will be forwarded to Senate

The National Assembly also clarified that the Bill will not proceed directly for presidential assent after being passed by MPs.

Because the proposed legislation concerns county governments, it will be forwarded to the Senate for consideration in accordance with the Constitution.

The Senate will be required to consider the Bill before it can complete the parliamentary process and be presented for presidential assent.

Parliament urged members of the public to rely on verified information about the Sacco Societies Amendment Bill instead of unconfirmed reports circulating online-PeopleDaily.Digital.

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Digital house-hunting platform bets on technology to reshape Nairobi’s rental market

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NAIROBI, Kenya, July 14 – A growing shift towards digital property searches is changing how Kenyans find rental homes, with real estate technology platform Reemio positioning itself as a solution to longstanding challenges.

This included fraudulent listings, costly house searches and limited market transparency.

As younger, tech-savvy consumers turn to online platforms to make purchasing decisions, the company says digitizing the rental process could improve efficiency for both tenants and landlords while lowering transaction costs.

“Our niche is to solve the problem of house hunting and also bring trust into that process. We use technology to connect renters and landlords,” said Kimani.

Kimani said the platform seeks to address inefficiencies that have traditionally made house hunting expensive and time-consuming.

Instead of physically visiting multiple properties, users can browse verified listings, take virtual tours, compare amenities and access information on additional costs such as water charges, electricity bills and service fees before scheduling physical viewings.

Beyond improving convenience for tenants, Reemio argues that technology can help landlords reduce marketing costs, shorten vacancy periods and reach a wider pool of prospective tenants, including Kenyans living abroad.

The company says its platform also generates market data that can help property owners and developers better understand evolving consumer preferences, although its long-term impact will depend on wider adoption of digital property platforms and continued investment in trustworthy online real estate marketplaces-Capitalfm.co.ke.

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ORPP edges two parties closer to joining Kenya’s political arena

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The Office of the Registrar of Political Parties (ORPP) has issued a notice for the provisional registration of two proposed political parties, opening a seven-day window for members of the public to lodge objections.

In a notice published by the Registrar of Political Parties and Chief Executive Officer J.C. Lorionokou, the ORPP announced that the Social Democratic Party of Kenya (SDP) and the People’s Alternative Voice (PAV) are in the process of being provisionally registered under Section 5(2)(a) of the Political Parties Act.

The ORPP, a State office established under Section 33 of the Political Parties Act and Article 260 of the Constitution, said its mandate includes registering and regulating political parties as well as administering the Political Parties Fund.

According to the notice, the Social Democratic Party of Kenya (SDP) has adopted pink, white and sky blue as its official party colours, with the slogan “Change – Mageuzi.” The party’s symbol is the acronym SDP enclosed inside a circle.

The party’s listed founder members are Nyangong’ Duncan Nyumbah, Omwandasi Jared Dishon and Kinyua Mary Wacuka.

The founders of PAV are listed as Odenyo John Fitzgerald Elly, Nyando Rachel Mmboga and Ali Hussein Kiplangat.

The Registrar said particulars of the two proposed political parties have been published on the ORPP website to facilitate public scrutiny as required by law.

Any person wishing to oppose the provisional registration of either party has seven days from the date of publication of the notice to submit objections either in writing or in person to the Office of the Registrar of Political Parties at Lion Place, Fourth Floor, Waiyaki Way at Karuna Close, Nairobi.

The provisional registration marks the first step in the legal process of establishing a political party in Kenya.

Kenya has 91 fully registered political parties. The ORPP’s updated register indicates that, as of January 2026, there were 91 parties that had met the legal requirements for full registration under the Political Parties Act-STAR.

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