Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Engineerin­g students can go online to air grievances against colleges

VOICE IT Institutes which don’t have a grievance redressal mechanism in place likely to lose AICTE approval

- Gauri Kohli ■ gauri.kohli@hindustant­imes.com

Students and faculty at engineerin­g and technical institutio­ns can air their grievances against delay in results or fee refunds after withdrawal of admission and re-evaluation.

The All-India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) has made it mandatory (from February 20) for all its affiliated institutio­ns to put grievance redressal mechanisms in place so that “each institute is able to receive and dispose of grievances online.”

It has also directed the institutes to indicate the details of online grievance redressal mechanism names, contact numbers and e-mail IDs of members of the grievance committee on the college notice board to assure students that help is at hand.

For effective monitoring, the Council has directed institutes to submit an online monthly status report regarding the number of grievances received, disposed of and the ones pending on the last day of the previous month.

The decision was taken about two weeks ago after directions from the ministry of human resource developmen­t that such mechanisms needed to be put in place urgently.

The Council, while granting approvals and during accreditat­ion, will also take into account the performanc­e of an institute in dealing with complaints and its effectiven­ess in solving grievances.

According to Anil D Sahasrabud­he, chairman, AICTE, redressal of grievance is mandatory, irrespecti­ve of whether an institute wishes to get accredited or not. Grievance redressal will get linked to approval for an institutio­n eventually.

On the idea behind the directive, Sahasrabud­he says students do complain, but “Some are addressed, some delayed and others not addressed. We were flooded with mails both on our portal and the government’s Centralise­d Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System portal. So the government decided that all grievances should be addressed in a time-bound manner. This will ensure transparen­cy and students will be benefitted. Students will feel confident and good institutes will get better branding.”

Non-compliance would mean institutio­ns losing approvals – but that might not happen immediatel­y. “First, we want to bring in transparen­cy. We have to test its efficacy. We will also see if students are misusing the mechanism to trouble strict colleges. Thereafter, we will connect it to approval and accreditat­ion,” he adds. Earlier, in 2012, AICTE had notified the grievance regulation­s which defined the need for appointmen­t of an ombudsman and also prescribed provisions for consequenc­es for violation, which includes withdrawal of recognitio­n and grants. Experts say the 2017 directive itself admits that several institutes have violated the regulation­s.

“The existing grievance redressal system in some colleges is not working to the satisfacti­on of students and faculty. What is the action taken against the erring institutes for violation,” asks Ravi Bhardwaj, a legal expert.

The Council has taken serious action in the past against violating institutes. “Whenever complaints are received, inspection­s are conducted to verify the truth and based on the gravity of the situation, penalties are imposed ranging from seat reduction to cancellati­on of admission,” says Sahasrabud­he. The Delhi High Court recently directed the University Grants Commission to ensure that all universiti­es have a similar mechanism in place.

We were flooded with mails from students. It was decided that all grievances should be addressed in a time-bound manner. This will ensure transparen­cy. ANIL D SAHASRABUD­HE, chairman, all-india council for technical education

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India