There is nothing stopping the State from acquiring land in any part of the county to build schools. The law allows the government to acquire any land for such purposes.
You have not stated why you think boarding schools should continue. I am shocked that you suggest that primary schools be turned in to boarding schools. Boarding schools may well be responsible for the creation of youthful criminals and others with extreme anti social behavior in society. Children have to be brought up by their parents and guardians in a loving environment even as they pursue formal education. If you are advocating for boarding schools because there is a shortage, I would rather you sought to address the shortage by appealing for more days schools in Nairobi and other areas with such a shortage.
If there are vacancies in Central then the chance to concentrate on quality has presented itself. Instead of crying that there are "too few" students, we should celebrate that we have smaller and manageable classes - something that will allow teacher and pupil greater opportunities to teach and learn. Right now a class size in Kenya stands at 40 students (secondary) and I think 30 (Primary). Nowhere is this upheld. There are as many as 70 kids in one classroom meant for 30. Needless to say there can be no learning. No teacher would give homework and if he does, will be unable to mark and provide guidance to individual pupils.
On Jua Kali and Matatu: Nobody listened to Dr. Sally Kosgei when she warned against the destruction of middle level colleges in the rush to create universities. Her warning fell on deaf ears. The strength of this country lies in investing more in polytechnics and technical schools. That is because the labour most needed comes from those institutions.
The reason I keep asking that Ethiopians be allowed to enter and work in Kenya rather than Ugandans and Rwandese, is that Ethiopia and Tanzania invested heavily in middle and low level institutions and have some of the best skilled labour on the continent. Allow 200k Ethiopian artisans to enter and you will cut down on the cost of labor in the construction industry. Needless to say they will also kick our lazy asses in to action. Perhaps then we can build more schools.
Incidentally, why has no institution offered Manamba studies? We tell them how we want them to behave, but offer no education. I would like to see somebody offering Manamba / Conductor Studies at Certificate and Diploma level. I can help draw the curriculum.
despite our hatred for matatu sector and likes of safaricom/equity ..I think these are the models which we need to keep referring to when trying to solve Kenyan problems...
matatus are one of the most reliable sector we have serving millions day in day out without albeit some queries of quality of service
safaricom/equity have shown there is no limit to innovations which are scaleable to serve millions
alll these are private sector initiatives which are affordable where govt tried and failed miserably ... for me even in education/health the private sector holds the key ..... instead of harassing likes of Aviation college we need to build their capacity and even offer support say every private education and even health institution serving over 100 will have one employee paid for by govt .... it is a good start that HELB is supporting private university students though the deficit is becoming bigger ...maybe CDF, youth, women fund, can be more meaningfu at HELB
In nearly all urban slums -umoja, kayole, githurai, Kondele, Makongenis - all over Kenya there is hardly any public space to build schools/health facilities to cater for thousand kids.... maybe this is the main reason why most pundits have no option but to take their kids to murang'a and nyeri where there are schools are vacant ... in fact it could be time the public primary schools in rural areas are turned into boarding schools to cater for urban population given the observed trends with rural population in Central Kenya which has bulk of quality primary schools with teachers and infrastructure serving very few kids