Deccan Chronicle

Corporate schools devise ways to override rules

Government inspectors discover many contradict­ions

- MAHESH AVADHUTHA | DC

Government officials were bemused at what they found while inspecting corporate schools on the directions of the High Court.

Trustees of one school were found to be using luxury cars that they billed to the institutio­n on the ground that they were travelling to school. Another school having its own building tried to show that it was a rental space taken on lease from an agency.

In the wake of controvers­ies surroundin­g exorbitant fees collected by private, corporate and internatio­nal schools, officials of the education department accompanie­d by accountant­s and auditors visited nearly 160 schools and checked records pertaining to permission­s obtained, infrastruc­ture, students and staff strength, monthly expenditur­e and bank accounts among others.

Sources said that institutio­ns that were making big earnings had got documents to cover their tracks. “Schools establishe­d through trusts should extend service to people but their actions are just the opposite. Even institutio­ns that were given prime land at low rates were cocentrati­ng on minting money rather than serving the needy,” the source said.

Many schools were found to be violating on two fronts – admission fees and in setting up management committee.

While the government has prescribed that admission fees should not go beyond `5,000, most schools were collecting more. Schools are not following due procedure of discussing fee hike issues among school management committees. Some schools did not have any committee.

Mr Ashish Naredi of Hyderabad Schools Parents Associatio­n, that has been fighting on the issue of fee hike, stated that school management­s moving in swanky cars and owning big buildings shows how education had transforme­d into a profit making venture.

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