Road Safety Tips 👍. Number 12 Will shock you.

 . Don't use your mobile phone whilst driving

- Making or receiving a call, even using a 'hands free' phone, can distract your attention from driving and could lead to an accident.

2. Belt up in the back

- In a collision, an unbelted rear passenger can kill or seriously injure the driver or a front seat passenger.

3. Don't drink and drive

- Any alcohol, even a small amount, can impair your driving so be a safe driver; don't drink and drive.

4. Slow down

- At 60Km/h you are twice as likely to kill a pedestrian as at 50Km/h.

5. Children

- Children often act impulsively, take extra care outside schools, near buses and ice cream vans when they might be around.

6. Take a break

- Tiredness is thought to be a major factor in more than 10% of road accidents. Plan to stop for at least a 15 minute break every 2 hours on a long journey.

7. Walk safely

- When crossing a road always use a pedestrian crossing if there is one nearby. Help others to see you by wearing fluorescent or reflective clothing in poor light conditions.

8. Anticipate

- Observe and anticipate other road users and use your mirrors regularly.

9. Use car seats

- Child and baby seats should be fitted properly and checked every trip.

10. Keep your distance

- Always keep a two second gap between you and the car in front.

11. Keep Left Unless Overtaking 

- Leave the lanes to your right for vehicles that are faster than yours.

12. Obey the Continuous Yellow Line

- Do not overtake on a Continuous Yellow line. It is dangerous to do so. Treat the line as a "wall" that separates the living from the dead. 

13. Use your side-view mirrors (or side mirrors, or wing mirrors) 

- While the rearview mirror allows you to see what is behind you, the side mirrors allow you to see not only what is on your side, but also what is in your blind spots.

14. Do not distract the driver.

- Self explanatory

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14 Devolved Functions of County Governments In Kenya.

The Fourth Schedule of the Constitution contains information on the devolved services in Kenya. It stipulates the division of functions between the national and the county governments in Kenya. The devolved functions in Kenya performed by county governments are as follows.

1. AGRICULTURE, including crop and animal husbandry, livestock sale yards, county abattoirs (slaughterhouses), plant and animal disease control, and fisheries.

2. COUNTY HEALTH SERVICES, including, in particular – county health facilities and pharmacies, ambulance services, promotion of primary health care, licensing and control of undertakings that sell food to the public, veterinary services (excluding regulation of the profession which is a national government function), cemeteries, funeral parlours and crematoria, and refuse removal, refuse dumps and solid waste disposal.

3. CONTROL OF AIR POLLUTION, noise pollution, other public nuisances, and outdoor advertising.

4. CULTURAL ACTIVITIES, public entertainment and public amenities, including – betting, casinos and other forms of gambling, racing, liquor licensing, cinemas, video shows and hiring, libraries, museums, sports and cultural activities and facilities, and county parks, beaches and recreation facilities.

5. COUNTY TRANSPORT, including – County roads (Class D, E and Unclassified Roads), street lighting, traffic and parking, public road transport, and ferries and harbours (excluding the regulation of international and national shipping and matters related thereto).

6. ANIMAL CONTROL and welfare, including – licensing of dogs, and facilities for the accommodation, care, and burial of animals.

7. TRADE DEVELOPMENT and regulation, including – markets, trade licences (excluding regulation of professions), fair trading practices, local tourism, and cooperative societies.

8. COUNTY PLANNING and development, including – statistics, land survey and mapping, boundaries and fencing, housing, and electricity and gas reticulation and energy regulation.

9. EDUCATION – only pre-primary education (ECD), village polytechnic (TVET), home craft centres and childcare facilities.

10. IMPLEMENTATION of SPECIFIC NATIONAL government POLICIES on natural resources and environmental conservation, including soil and water conservation, and forestry.

11. COUNTY PUBLIC WORKS and services, including – stormwater management systems in built-up areas, and water and sanitation services.

12. FIREFIGHTING SERVICES and DISASTER management.

13. CONTROL of DRUGS and PORNOGRAPHY. 

14. ENSURING and COORDINATING the participation of communities and locations in governance at the local level and assisting communities and locations to develop the administrative capacity for the effective exercise of the functions and powers and participation in governance at the local level.

Thus, the Fourth Schedule assigns fourteen (14) functions to the county governments in Kenya to perform.





Queen Elizabeth II Dies aged 96 at Balmoral, 8th September 2022.

Queen Elizabeth II (Elizabeth Alexandra Mary; 21 April 1926 – 8 September 2022), the UK's longest-serving monarch, has died at Balmoral aged 96 on 8th September 2022, after reigning for 70 years. 

Elizabeth became Queen aged 26, while in Kenya, during her stay at Treetops – one of the country's first game lodges – the night before her father the King's unexpected death on 6 February 1952. She was in the company of her 25-year-old young husband, Prince Philip. 

Treetops Hotel was a hotel in Aberdare National Park in Kenya near the township of Nyeri, 1,966 m (6,450 ft) above sea level on the Aberdare Range and in sight of Mount Kenya. Despite its royal connections and reputation as Kenya's oldest safari lodge, Treetops has been forced to close alongside two other historic hotels in the park due to the lingering effects of the pandemic on the country's tourism sector.

She was Queen of the United Kingdom and of 14 other sovereign countries from 6 February 1952 until her death. Her reign of 70 years and seven months is the longest of any British monarch.

RIP ~Jeremy BigBrother