Allahabad HC defers hearing on plea challenging merger of primary schools in UP
Press Trust of India | July 3, 2025 | 07:55 AM IST | 1 min read
The petition says the decision violates the Right to Education Act, arguing that merging schools would place primary schools farther away, making access harder for young children.
NEW DELHI: The Lucknow Bench of the Allahabad High Court on Wednesday deferred the hearing on a plea challenging the Uttar Pradesh government's decision to merge primary schools across the state. The court granted the deferment at the request of the state counsel. It will hear the matter again on Thursday.
A bench of Justice Pankaj Bhatia passed the order on a writ petition filed by Krishna Kumari and 50 others. The petitioners have challenged the Basic Education Department's decision, issued on June 16, which provides for the merger of primary schools into upper primary or composite schools based on student enrolment numbers.
Plea challenges school merger decision
The petition argues that the decision violates the provisions of the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act. It contends that the merger would result in primary schools being located farther away for young children, potentially leading them to miss out on their education . The petitioners emphasised that under the Right to Education Act, it is the government's legal responsibility to provide primary education schools close to children.
When the bench took up the matter for hearing on Wednesday, following a mention by the petitioners' counsel, the state lawyer requested that the hearing be postponed until Thursday.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Telangana CM calls for assembly debate on strengthening intermediate education; seeks plan to curb dropouts
CM Reddy flagged the gap between Class 10 passouts and those completing intermediate, noting higher retention in states with Classes 9 to 12 under school education. He asked officials to submit a report on adopting a similar system.
Press Trust of India | 1 min readFeatured News
]- IIT Mandi makes attendance must for conference on reincarnation, ‘afterlife communication’
- IIT placements panel discusses ban on sharing of JEE Advanced ranks with recruiters
- CMC Vellore MBBS admissions handpicked doctors who’d serve in India; NEET paper leak renews debate
- IISER Pune plans BS-MS student exchange with other IISERs, more courses for professionals: Director
- West Bengal school teachers deployed for SIR now ordered to join Annapurna Bhandar duties; plan to move court
- IISER Bhopal discontinued BS-MS course over placement issues, offering BTech-MTech degrees: Director
- From next year, CBSE Class 12 answer sheets on Digilocker: Education ministry
- 'Son Im Crine': A teen and techies Vs the CBSE; or how the battle over the OSM portal unfolded online
- RTMNU Nagpur University exams plagued by delays, result errors; chaos disrupts academic schedule, internships
- Password in public? CBSE OSM portal under lens after 19-year-old hacker claims to bypass security measures