When the waters of Lake Naivasha began rising, few imagined the ripple‑effect it would have on so many families. But now, right at the heart of Kenya’s Rift Valley region, entire communities are being uprooted, homes are submerged, schools are flooded, and parents are grappling with unimaginable disruption.
What’s happening
According to a recent report by The Standard, more than 4,000 families in the Nakuru County area have been displaced by the rapidly rising waters of Lake Naivasha. The actual number may be even higher, the article notes “over 4,000” and local leaders warn it could rise further given ongoing heavy rains.
Homes, latrines, schools and even places of worship have been flooded. The county government has been forced to provide transportation to relocate vulnerable families to neighbouring estates.
Why it matters for families, and especially parents
-
Homes lost or compromised: Imagine trying to keep your children safe and dry when your home is under water. Latrines are submerged, raising the risk of water‐borne disease.
-
Children’s schooling disrupted: With schools flooding, parents must scramble to find safe spaces for their kids to learn, sometimes in relocation sites, sometimes not at all.
-
Livelihoods at risk: Many affected families are employed as workers at flower farms in the area. One worker interviewed said they cannot afford to relocate because landlords have hiked rent.
-
Mental and emotional strain: The uncertainty of where you and your family will sleep, and whether your children will remain healthy and continue schooling, creates enormous stress.
-
Infrastructure and safety concerns: Local residents report even hippos straying into homes as floodwaters rise, an alarming threat to children and families.
Voices from the ground
“We are sleeping in the flooded houses as we don’t have money to relocate while the people whom we voted into office have completely forgotten us.” Beth Wamaitha, flower‑farm worker.
“We are ready to take to the streets to demand our rights as the situation is getting dire with hippos straying into our homes.” Mathew Halili, resident.
Local leader Eunice Mureithi points out that “some of the residents bought the land legally and had title deeds amid allegations that they were living on riparian land,” raising complex questions of rights, responsibility and vulnerability.
What parents can do right now
-
Ensure safety first: If you’re one of the displaced families, prioritise a safe shelter for your children even if it means temporary relocation.
-
Keep children’s education going: Reach out to local relief agencies or the county offices to ask where children can continue schooling or get catch‑up lessons.
-
Monitor health risks: Floods bring illnesses. Make sure children’s vaccinations are up to date and that you’re accessing safe drinking water and sanitary facilities.
-
Document everything: If you own land or have title deeds, keep records safe. This may help with future compensation or relocation assistance.
-
Advocate together: Join community groups or local relief platforms, parents speaking with one voice may attract faster support from government or NGOs.
What still needs to happen
-
A formal disaster declaration: Local leaders are urging the national and county governments to declare this a national disaster so that resources and relief can be mobilised more swiftly.
-
Compensation and relocation plans: For families who legally own land or were given title deeds, there needs to be a transparent plan for relocation or compensation.
-
Long‑term resilience building: Beyond immediate relief, families need sustainable solutions, safe housing, flood‑resistant infrastructure, and alternative livelihoods if their current jobs become untenable due to climate impact.
-
Focus on children and schooling: These displaced children should not fall behind. Targeted educational support and psychosocial assistance are essential.
If you’re a parent in Kenya or anywhere in a region affected by flooding or climate change, you’ll recognise the fears and responsibilities this situation brings. The story of Lake Naivasha’s displaced families is a warning: climate change isn’t distant, it’s happening now, and sometimes it lands right on your doorstep.
For parents, this means preparing not just with snacks and Timetable for homework, but with emergency plans, communication strategies, and community networks. When a whole community is displaced, the strongest safety net is often neighbours and other parents.
Let’s keep the conversation going: how are you preparing your family for sudden disruption? How can communities support each other? Because no parent should have to watch their home vanish under water without knowing their children will be OK.