Teachers in Kenya will soon be entitled to enhanced maternity and paternity leave with full pay, The East African reports.
Teachers Service Commission (TSC) chief executive officer Nancy Macharia announced that new mothers will now be entitled to 120 days maternity leave, up from the statutory 90 days, while fathers will have 21 days paternity leave, an increase from the current 14 days.
Ms Macharia made the announcement in a February 10 notice as she urged teachers to apply for the leave through the Human Resource Management Information System.
Teachers are now also entitled to 45 days of pre-adoptive leave.
Maternity leave begins on the date of delivery and a teacher will not forfeit their annual holiday as a result of taking maternity leave.
For male teachers, paternity leave begins during the duration of their spouse’s maternity leave. The pre-adoptive leave starts on the date of adoption.
The extended leave was reportedly introduced in the 2021-2025 collective bargaining agreement (CBA) that teachers’ unions signed with TSC last year.
However, the deal was unpopular with teachers as it lacked a monetary component after the expiry of the previous deal that allowed teachers to benefit from Ksh54 billion ($475.1 million) spread over five years.
“The Code of Regulations for Teachers (2015) read together with the CBA (2021-2025) have specific provisions for maternity, paternity and pre-adoptive leave,” Ms Macharia said.
“In line with the said provisions, all teachers are eligible for only one leave at a time. The purpose of this circular is to inform you of the changes which came into effect from July 1 2021.”
The Kenya National Union of Teachers (Knut) and the Kenya Union of Post Primary Teachers (Kuppet) are trying to renegotiate the CBA with the TSC but have remained quiet about the progress of the talks.
In January, Kuppet gave the TSC 21 days (which lapsed last week) to provide a response or said they would call a nationwide strike that could disrupt national examinations scheduled for next month.
Source: The East African
(Quotes via original reporting)
Teachers in Kenya will soon be entitled to enhanced maternity and paternity leave with full pay, The East African reports.
Teachers Service Commission (TSC) chief executive officer Nancy Macharia announced that new mothers will now be entitled to 120 days maternity leave, up from the statutory 90 days, while fathers will have 21 days paternity leave, an increase from the current 14 days.
Ms Macharia made the announcement in a February 10 notice as she urged teachers to apply for the leave through the Human Resource Management Information System.
Teachers are now also entitled to 45 days of pre-adoptive leave.
Maternity leave begins on the date of delivery and a teacher will not forfeit their annual holiday as a result of taking maternity leave.
For male teachers, paternity leave begins during the duration of their spouse’s maternity leave. The pre-adoptive leave starts on the date of adoption.
The extended leave was reportedly introduced in the 2021-2025 collective bargaining agreement (CBA) that teachers’ unions signed with TSC last year.
However, the deal was unpopular with teachers as it lacked a monetary component after the expiry of the previous deal that allowed teachers to benefit from Ksh54 billion ($475.1 million) spread over five years.
“The Code of Regulations for Teachers (2015) read together with the CBA (2021-2025) have specific provisions for maternity, paternity and pre-adoptive leave,” Ms Macharia said.
“In line with the said provisions, all teachers are eligible for only one leave at a time. The purpose of this circular is to inform you of the changes which came into effect from July 1 2021.”
The Kenya National Union of Teachers (Knut) and the Kenya Union of Post Primary Teachers (Kuppet) are trying to renegotiate the CBA with the TSC but have remained quiet about the progress of the talks.
In January, Kuppet gave the TSC 21 days (which lapsed last week) to provide a response or said they would call a nationwide strike that could disrupt national examinations scheduled for next month.
Source: The East African
(Quotes via original reporting)