Promotion Alert: 30,000 Teachers to Benefit from Shs 2 Billion TSC Allocation
๐๐ฎ๐ง๐ ๐ ๐๐จ๐ฐ๐๐ซ๐ฌ, ๐๐๐ข๐ซ๐จ๐๐ข
๐๐๐๐ง๐๐ฌ๐๐๐ฒ, ๐๐๐ญ๐ก ๐๐๐ฒ, ๐๐๐๐
In a massive boost for career advancement in the teaching profession, the Teachers Service Commission (TSC) has signaled that a major promotion exercise for 30,000 teachers is set to kick off this December.
Appearing before the National Assembly Departmental Committee on Education to defend the 2026/27 Financial Year budget estimates, TSC Acting CEO Ms. Eveleen Mitei revealed that the Commission has prioritized ending the long-standing stagnation that has plagued thousands of educators.
The December Promotion Drive: 30,000 Slots
The headline news from the Bunge Towers session was the commitment to move 30,000 teachers up the career ladder starting late this year.
With KES 2 billion specifically earmarked for this exercise, the December rollout is expected to be one of the largest promotion cycles in recent history.
The December Timeline: The Commission intends to utilize the end-of-year window to process applications, ensuring that promoted teachers can transition into their new grades by the start of the 2027 academic year.
Vacancie-Based Growth: The 30,000 slots will largely be filled based on vacancies created by natural attrition, including retirements and exits from the service throughout 2025 and 2026.
Transparency Mandate: Committee Chairperson Hon. Julius Melly directed the TSC to ensure the process is handled with absolute transparency to avoid โpromotional imbalancesโ between regions.
Intern Confirmation: The January 2027 Roadmap
While the promotions take center stage this December, the TSC also addressed the fate of the internship cohort.
The Commission confirmed that 20,000 intern teachers are on track for conversion to Permanent and Pensionable (P&P) terms in January 2027.
The TSC clarified that this January date is non-negotiable as it marks the completion of the mandatory two-year service period for the 2025 recruits.
To ensure the budget remains balanced for these confirmations, the Commission stated it would pause any fresh P&P recruitment until the current intern pool is fully absorbed.
Revising the โRules of the Gameโ
A significant victory for teachers came when Hon. Melly ordered the TSC to surrender its Career Progression Guidelines (CPG) to the Committee for a formal review.
The move follows widespread complaints that the current guidelines have acted more as a โbottleneckโ than a ladder.
The Committee aims to overhaul these rules to ensure that the 30,000 promotions scheduled for Decemberโand all future cyclesโare based on fair, achievable criteria that recognize both academic qualifications and years of service.
The โBungeโ Directives: Certificates and Compensation
The Committee also used the session to tackle two critical welfare issues:
Withheld Certificates: TSC was ordered to ensure no Principal holds onto a teacherโs original academic certificates, a practice that has previously blocked teachers from applying for higher roles.
Unfunded Injuries: The Commission expressed concern that Work Injury Benefit Act (WIBA) compensations remain unfunded in the current estimates, a gap the Committee promised to look into to protect teachers injured in the line of duty.
Conclusion
The 100,000-strong recruitment drive over the last three years has addressed the โteacher shortage,โ but the focus has now shifted to โteacher morale.โ
With KES 2 billion on the table and a December start date for 30,000 promotions, the TSC is under immense pressure to prove that it can manage the growth of its staff as efficiently as it manages their paychecks.
With 30,000 slots opening up in December, do you think the current KES 2 billion allocation is enough to clear the backlog of teachers who have stagnated in the same job group for years?
