In the heart of Siaya County, whispers of a familiar name are resurfacing—Calvin Burgess, the American investor whose Dominion Farms once promised to transform the Yala Swamp into an agricultural powerhouse. Nearly a decade after his dramatic and controversial exit, his return has stirred both curiosity and caution.
Dominion Farms, at its height, was envisioned as a beacon of modern agribusiness. Burgess pledged to turn thousands of acres into a rice-producing hub, bringing infrastructure, jobs, and hope to a region long starved of large-scale investment. But the dream was short-lived. Accusations of extortion, land disputes, and public clashes with ODM leadership—especially Raila Odinga—led to his disillusioned departure. He left branding the experience as a cautionary tale of corruption, betrayal, and political interference.
Yesterday, Burgess met with residents and the Kadenge community, confirming what had been the subject of local speculation. He revealed that he had landed in Kenya on Saturday, 9th August 2025, with a mission he described as “doing the right thing that follows the protocols of the government of Kenya and in the interests of the community.”
In his remarks, Burgess promised to reclaim and utilise the Yala Swamp once more, saying the revived project would create thousands of jobs, provide raw materials, boost food production, and support livelihoods across Kenya. He also pledged to revive the agricultural college his company once operated, describing education as key to sustaining the project’s long-term impact.

Burgess outlined his immediate plans: on 19th August, he will return to Canada to pack and load his properties, tools, and machinery onto ships bound for Kenya. He intends to return with his family six weeks later to begin operations in earnest.
For Siaya, his comeback poses an important question: is this a chance to rewrite the Dominion Farms story, or a potential repeat of history?
For youth-led initiatives like the Pamoja Frontline Initiative, this moment is a call to action. The new generation of Siaya’s leaders are not content to be passive beneficiaries. They are Sacco founders, systems builders, and movement architects who know that investment without accountability is exploitation, and that development without dignity is hollow.
If Burgess’s “second act” is to succeed, it must be grounded in community benefit, land justice, and transparent partnerships. His return will not just test the resilience of one investor—it will measure Siaya’s political maturity, and the readiness of its youth to lead the county into a new chapter of ethical collaboration and visionary development.








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