Under the new Delhi Schools Verification of Accounts and Refund of Excess Fee Bill, schools will have to show greater accountability in fees accepted and money spent. Erring schools may attract hefty fine and repeated offenders may even be imprisoned for 3-5 years.
"It has been observed that several schools charge exorbitant fees and siphon it off for other purposes, say by giving loans to some trust at zero per cent interest or produce fake bills. This will now be looked by a committee headed by retired judge. The committee will also empanel some 400-500 Chartered Accountants who will go through the accounts of the schools.
He said while the government favoured auditing of accounts which can put an end to the siphoning of the money, it did not want to "interfere" in amount spent by the school.
"We are not regulating the fees. We are only verifying the accounts," Kejriwal said, adding that the accounts submitted by the schools to the Directorate of Education will be put online.
More From This Section
The Cabinet yesterday cleared amendments in The Delhi School Education Act 1973 which scrapped the process of interviews at the nursery and other entry levels. More importantly, those taking donations or capitation will be fined Rs 5 lakh or 10 times the donation taken (whichever is more) as per the proposed amendment.
As per the proposed amendment in the DSEAA, offenders can be levied penalty of different grades for taking interviews at the entry levels including the nursery admission and charging capitation fees. Under this offenders will be liable for a hefty punishment and repeated offenders may also be imprisoned ranging from 3-5 years.
(REOPENS DES 37)
The proposed amendment in the Delhi School Education Amendment Act includes doing away with the non-detention policy. Under the non-detention policy students are not failed. Kejriwal defended the policy saying it was "deleterious".
Kejriwal also defended the government's move of reducing 25 per cent of syllabus as this will put an end to the "mugging up" attitude and also relieve students of some pressure.
The Chief Minister said the government is also working on to make the admission process of the Economically Weaker Section (EWS) online which can make it more transparent. The government is also tying with the NGOs to ensure that students from EWS don't feel neglected while studying with their classmates.