Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Not registered even after completing 5-year course

Students of architectu­re schools not approved by CoA were denied registrati­on, which meant they could not practice

- Jeevan Prakash Sharma jeevan.sharma@hindustant­imes.com

Aarti Poddar (name changed on request) completed a fiveyear-degree programme from the Chandigarh College of Architectu­re in 2013, but the Council of Architectu­re (CoA) refused to register her and she could not practice as an architect. The CoA argument was that it had withdrawn its approval for the Chandigarh College of Architectu­re to run degree programmes in 2008 because of inadequate faculty; therefore, students passing out from 2013 would not be registered as architects. The Chandigarh College of Architectu­re, one of India’s premier institutes for the past 60 years, is affiliated to Panjab University, Chandigarh.

According to CoA, there are 19 institutes admitting students despite not having CoA approvals. There are about 2000 such students, though unofficial figures could well be about 4000.

IT’S UNFAIR TO VICTIMISE HUNDREDS OF STUDENTS. I HOPE COA WILL NOW OBEY THE HIGH COURT ORDER

KAVITA PANT, student

To help them, the CoA decided to undertake a competency test in which those who scored 45% marks would be eligible for registrati­on. Though the test was conducted, some students with degrees in architectu­re who did not write the test appealed for and got a stay in the Delhi High Court on declaratio­n of

I SPENT ` 6 LAKH FOR B ARCH IN 2013, BUT I AM UNABLE TO DO A MASTER’S AS I AM NOT REGISTERED WITH COA

NITESH PATIL , student

the result.

A request by CoA to the ministry of human resource developmen­t (MHRD) to allow it to conduct such tests was rejected on the grounds of there being no statutory provision empowering the council to conduct a competency test. “Persons holding recognised qualificat­ion have to be registered as architects,” MHRD had said. The MHRD response is in line with the Punjab and Haryana High Court judgment, according to which, if an institute is affiliated to any university, it doesn’t need any CoA approval to run the course.

“The validity of the degree obtained through the affiliatio­n that an institute secures flows from the University and not on account of any approval granted by the Council,” says the HC.

Now after the HC judgment it has been settled that degrees of institutes which do not have CoA approval but are affiliated to various universiti­es will be recognised qualificat­ion for registrati­on with CoA.

“CoA’s process of granting or withdrawin­g approval has been arbitrary and there are lots of serious allegation­s against executive committee members. What is significan­t in the Budha College case is that the Central government favoured the college’s contention,” says DT Vinod Kumar, a CoA member.

“Looking at the Architects Act and the HC judgment, you will find that HC hasn’t given any new interpreta­tion of the Act. It has only read down the provisions of the Architects Act,” adds Kumar.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India