Millennium Post

Sisodia hails SC order on pvt school fee hike ‘historic’

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Terming the Supreme Court’s order on private schools as “historic”, Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia on Monday warned that the Delhi government will take strict action against those schools which don’t comply with the Apex Court’s judgment.

Sisodia, who also holds charge of the Education department, said private schools should focus on teaching students rather than making education a business.

Addressing a press conference, he said that there are several discrepanc­ies in fee and admission of private schools and said that the Delhi government wants them to get transparen­t in their admission processes and fee hikes.

The Deputy Chief Minister’s remarks came hours after the Supreme Court dismissed an appeal of committee of private unaided schools, located on land allotted here by DDA, challengin­g a Delhi High Court order asking them to take government’s prior nod before hiking fees.

Hailing the court’s order, the Deputy CM said: “We don’t have personal enmity with private schools and are also not against them. Government just wants to keep their (schools) free and admission process in a transparen­t manner.”

He said that private schools cannot harass parents in the name of fee and asserted that despite the SC’S order, if schools don’t follow rules, government has several tools to take strict action against them. Sisodia said that government will support fee hikes if the processes are transparen­t and has proper rationale behind the move.

He also said that in 2004, SC had also ordered private schools to comply with terms and conditions in their land allotment letters, but it was never implemente­d by the previous government.

“If they have some issues with the terms and conditions in their land allotment letters, they can return this land to government and we can run a good school,” he said.

Sisodia said that in a recently-conducted audit by government-appointed CAS, it was revealed that most private schools had surplus funds of up to Rs 5 crore.

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