Hindustan Times (Patiala)

HRD ministry may bring in faculty quota ordinance

- prashant.n@htlive.com Prashant K. Nanda

New Delhi: The human resource developmen­t (HRD) ministry may bring in an ordinance in the next two weeks to restore the reservatio­n policy in appointing teaching staff at universiti­es.

“We have answered the queries from the law ministry on certain anomalies and are awaiting the final approval from it on the ordinance,” a HRD ministry official said, requesting anonymity.

HRD minister Prakash Javadekar had said last week that he was keeping a close watch on the faculty reservatio­n issues and preparing to take action.

In October 2017, the University Grants Commission (UGC) had introduced rules, making reservatio­n applicable at the department level instead of at the university level. The UGC rules had followed an Allahabad High Court order of April 2017. The new UGC rules had led to widespread protests across universiti­es with professors and critics saying that such a move will deprive many candidates of reserved category of jobs.

The ministry is awaiting the hearing of the special leave petition on faculty reservatio­n in the Supreme Court, a second government official said, also requesting anonymity. The ministry moved court to reverse the high court verdict.

“The hearing is expected to be held by the month end. If there is any delay, we will go for an ordinance, as appointmen­ts are being stalled because of this,” the first official said.

The law ministry had asked the HRD ministry to address all anomalies related to reservatio­n of teaching staff, officials said. While scheduled caste and scheduled tribe reservatio­n in faculty appointmen­t happens across all levels, from assistant professors to professors, reservatio­n for other backward classes is applied only till the level of assistant professor. “The question of extending OBC reservatio­ns at all levels needs to be addressed after due consultati­on with all stake holders. We just want to restore the reservatio­n roster with the university as the unit, instead of the department as a unit,” the official said.

“The UGC reservatio­n rules in place for last year hampers social inclusion in appointmen­ts. The ministry has to decide quickly through an ordinance on the subject. Else it will have two ramificati­ons. One, wider protest in campuses and two, teacher appointmen­t will get delayed impacting academic activities,” said a Delhi University professor who asked not to be named.

The ministry said there are more than 6,000 vacant positions at central universiti­es and unless reservatio­n rules are finalized, it will not be possible to fill up the posts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India