Bungu Koraga Primary School in Nyando is the only public school in the constituency to have missed out in the government's rural electrification project.
The move has now angered area residents who now accuse area leadership of reluctance in supporting the school's infrastructural development, a situation which has seen it miss out on government infrastructural funding.
They have called on Education Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang'i and his Energy counterpart Charles Keter to clarify on the allegations that the area's only public school may not have been registered and that could be the reason why it did not benefit from the government's free electricity connection.
Led by committee members, the residents who met on Sunday now want the two Cabinet Secretaries to intervene and save the school from collapse.
"Electricity has been the talk of every electioneering period and we have been ignorant about the free electricity project. But now the project has come to an end and we do not know where to start," said Philegona Rabong'o, a committee member.
Even though the Rural Electrification Authority (REA) had expressed confidence of beating the ministry's power connection deadline, the school is yet to receive any electric poles.
A source from the Nyanza Regional REA offices hinted that some of the schools which had not been connected were out of the Education Ministry's list which was presented to them.
The source who is not allowed to speak to the media said there were plans to revisit such schools to include them in the project.
"All the information and data are at the head office in Nairobi but what I can tell you is that the delay in connection is partly contributed by the Ministry of Education. However I cannot confirm whether the school you mentioned is one of the unregistered schools," said the source.
Area Member of Parliament Fred Outa said his office had presented the school to REA last year but no response has come yet.
"At first, REA said they wanted to clear with secondary schools. Now all the secondary schools are connected and I do not understand why this particular school has been forgotten," he said.
Outa said the over 100 primary and 30 secondary schools in the area have all been connected.