Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Govt indecision keeps education dept and teachers on tenterhook­s

- Navneet Sharma navneetsha­rma@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH : The Punjab school education department and thousands of its teachers are on tenterhook­s due to the state government’s indecision on the Teacher Transfer Policy 2018.

The policy, approved by the state cabinet in a meeting held under the chairmansh­ip of chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh on March 7 this year for “greater transparen­cy” in transfers, has been on hold following protests by the teachers’ unions due to their opposition to clauses related to deemed vacancy, cap on minimum stint in a school and criteria for transfer.

Though the state government gave an assurance to the agitating schoolteac­hers three months ago that their demands will be accommodat­ed and the department officials agreed “in principle” to their demands in the policy in subsequent meetings, no final decision has been taken so far. As a result, the policy, which provided for online general transfers of teachers once a year and was to be applicable from April 1, 2018, has still not been implemente­d.

Sanjha Adhyapak Morcha convener Balkar Singh Valtoha said the chief minister has twice cancelled his meetings with the morcha representa­tives in the past six weeks and no fresh date has been given. “The department officials say that changes have been proposed and the matter is with the government, but nothing has been done on the teacher transfer policy or regularisa­tion of contractua­l staff,” he said.

The morcha – a group formed

SCHOOLTEAC­HERS TO HIT THE STREETS AGAIN UNDER THE BANNER OF SANJHA ADHYAPAK MORCHA ON TRANSFER POLICY, REGULARISA­TION

by various school teachers’ unions – has decided to hit the streets again and hold a protest march in Patiala on July 14 to press their demands. It is also demanding regularisa­tion of contractua­l teachers, full pay scale for teachers on equal work equal pay principle, changes in teacher-taught ratio for secondary and senior secondary classes and amendments in the rationalis­ation policy.

When contacted, director general of school education Prashant Kumar Goyal said the policy is under reconsider­ation. “We are hopeful that the policy will be cleared soon. Once a decision is taken, it will be implemente­d,” he said. School education minister OP Soni could not be contacted despite repeated attempts.

The schoolteac­hers have been up in arms against the policy clauses that put a seven-year cap on tenure at one place and mandate that no teacher will be allowed to seek transfer before completion of three years in a school. “The idea behind introducin­g these clauses was to provide a level playing field and end complacenc­y among teachers, but the government is having a relook at them. We do not want these issues to affect the overall objective,” said a senior official.

The policy, which has a number of significan­t initiative­s aimed at improving the quality of education, gives preference to teachers who have delivered good results and those who send their children to government­run schools in transfers and postings in the state.

Teachers will be awarded points out of 200 on age, length of service, performanc­e, special categories, among other criteria and get preference on the basis of their score. The state has about 19,000 schools with over 1 lakh teachers.

 ?? HT FILE ?? Members of Sanjha Morcha Teachers’ Union, Punjab, holding a protest against the state government in Patiala.
HT FILE Members of Sanjha Morcha Teachers’ Union, Punjab, holding a protest against the state government in Patiala.

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