Deccan
Chronicle: Hyderabad: Tuesday, June 04, 2019.
The
urban residential school (URS) in Hyderabad was started in 2010 with the aim of
providing education to orphans but has not fulfilled that aim due to the apathy
of the state education department.
There
are at least 87 Right to Information (RTI) queries filed with the education
department seeking information on the use of funds allocated to the school but
they have not been answered. This has raised the question of what is being done
with the budget allocated for this purpose. In answer to a petition filed
before the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR), the
Commission ordered the district collector to conduct an enquiry and send the
report within 20 days.
The
URS in Hyderabad is frequently shut down and reopened though it should be
functioning throughout the year. Reportedly, the budget for the scheme has been
allocated and will be directly deposited in the account of the DEO. However, no
one will say what has happened to the amounts allocated since 2010.
Many
RTIs were filed to know these details, but these have been ignored.
Sources
in the education department, who did not want to be identified, “First the
scheme was started in 2010 in two districts in Khammam and Hyderabad. The
Khamman UR schools are running well. No one knows what happened to the schools
in Hyderabad. Suddenly some students were enrolled in 2017 and some dropped out
and they shut down the school stating that it was due to lack of staff.”
The
period during which the UR school was running, some temporary staffers were
hired. However, their salaries were not paid. As many of them were from
Scheduled Caste/Tribes, they approached the SC/ST Commission and got their
salaries on the orders of the Commission.
Mr
Akshay Kumar, a social activist who filed the petition in the NCPCR, said
the Erramanzil Government school had 64
children in 2018, but suddenly this number dropped to 15, and the children were
shifted to a private hostel because it was claimed that there was no staff to
look after the children. “The minimum basic needs of the children haven't been
met. The money which was allocated was swindled,” Mr Kumar says. “There are at
least 87 RTI applications filed regarding the same. However, none of them was
replied to. We even approached the information commissioner about this,” he
added.
When
contacted for details of the URS,
district education officer B. Venkata Narasamma was unavailable for
comment.
Khairatabad
corporator P. Vijaya Reddy said, “I have requested the government to continue
running the school at Erramanzil as it will be a successful project if
implemented properly. I was informed that the enrolment of students was very
less and due to the same, they shifted the children to Ameerpet.”
According
to a survey conducted by teachers between June 10 and 14 in 2018, there were 87
children in the area who were eligible for the scheme, but they were not
encouraged to take admission in the school.