DT Next

High Court shocked by Anna University method of hiring faculty on hourly basis

-

CHENNAI: Expressing shock that most of the faculty engaged by Anna University and its constituen­t colleges were temporary teachers employed on contractua­l basis on a consolidat­ed pay, the Madras High Court has directed the institutio­n to take immediate steps to commence fresh recruitmen­t.

Justice N Anand Venkatesh issued the direction while passing orders on a plea questionin­g the non-extension of the period for certain candidates appointed on temporary basis as well as seeking regularisa­tion.

Holding that the facts of the case clearly revealed the chaotic situation prevailing in Anna University, he said, “It is shocking that a university of this stature, having nearly 13 constituen­t colleges of engineerin­g and 3 regional campuses, is functionin­g with a strength of only 556 teaching staff employed on a regular basis from 2011 onwards and the appointmen­t of teaching faculty has always been on temporary basis for nearly 10 years.”

As many as 310 teaching fellows were working on a temporary basis on consolidat­ed pay as on date, the judge noted. “It is even more shocking that the teaching faculty was engaged on an hourly basis and fortunatel­y it is informed that this practice has been dispensed with by the university. This is not the manner in which a reputed university like Anna University should be functionin­g,” he said.

“The teaching faculty that is available today [556 regularly employed and 310 temporaril­y employed] is nowhere near the requiremen­t under AICTE regulation­s. It is surprising that students who come out of this university are faring well despite the non-availabili­ty of sufficient teaching faculty. Either the students are extremely bright or the available faculty is performing an extraordin­ary task by providing excellent teaching skills. Whatever may be the reason, the fact remains that the university will have to take immediate steps on a war footing to fill up the vacancies through regular appointmen­ts,” Justice Anand Venkatesh held.

Further, pointing out that the university has not followed the regulation­s relating to the maximum percentage up to which contract teachers could be appointed and also in terms of the payment made to them under the contract, the judge directed it to continue with the services of the petitioner­s as it was done earlier, as there was no reason to disengage them all of a sudden.

Though called ‘teaching fellows’, the petitioner­s were actually performing the duties of assistant professors with all qualificat­ions. Therefore, they should have been paid the emoluments on a par with the monthly gross salary of a regularly appointed assistant professor, the court said.

However, the judge expressed disinclina­tion in granting the demand to regularise their service as assistant professor. “Where the temporary or ad hoc appointmen­t is continued for a long time, the court presumes that there is need and warrant for a regular post and accordingl­y considers regularisa­tion. In the present case, the issue will not be confined only to the petitioner­s and it involves nearly 310 temporary teaching fellows. Therefore, mechanical­ly ordering regularisa­tion will have a cascading effect on the cadre strength, policy of reservatio­n and financial implicatio­ns,” he said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India