Delhi Government puts its school teachers on bird-flu duty
Teachers complained that the government was "taking advantage" of the COVID-19 situation and "harrassing teachers into unjustified duties".
Atul Krishna | January 13, 2021 | 01:37 PM IST
NEW DELHI : Delhi Government has put some of its school teachers on bird-flu duty. On January 12, it issued a list of officials, which included teachers, tasked with enforcing bird flu protocols in the state. Government school teachers, who were pressed into service in the fight against COVID-19 in 2020, find the new demand “insulting”.
The January 12 order sets up a task force and enlisted officials are required to ensure that “no vehicle carrying live poultry birds is allowed to enter without a valid veterinary health certificate” and to restrict the “sale of dressed, processed and canned chicken”. The list includes five teachers.
Ajay Veer Yadav, general secretary of Government School Teachers Association (GSTA), said: “It is highly unfortunate and insulting to the teaching position that teachers are allotted duties for such tasks, the teaching community is against this order.”
Teachers also complained that they "have been mostly assigned midnight hours of this duty."
Non-teaching tasks
Ever since the COVID-19 induced nationwide lockdowns were introduced, teachers were used as manpower for managing the pandemic by allotting them duties from managing quarantine centres to distributing meals to migrant workers stranded during the lockdown.
" The teaching community selflessly served when the government and the citizens needed them for COVID-19 prevention but the Revenue Department is now taking advantage of the situation and just harrassing teachers into unjustified duties," the GSTA said in a statement.
The Right to Education Act 2009 discourages deploying government school teachers on non-teaching tasks beyond the few roles they have traditionally fulfilled such as census enumeration and election duty. Even the AAP government in Delhi had earlier issued orders saying teachers must be allowed to focus on teaching alone.
Teachers also pointed out that since annual examinations are approaching, they have to put in extra effort to prepare students through the blended mode of learning in place due to the pandemic.
“The education minister should look into this issue and take an appropriate response. This time is crucial for teachers to focus on students’ studies prior to the year-end exam and not for forced labour,” Yadav added.
Over the past few weeks, states across India had reported instances of bird flu among poultry, especially chicken, causing state governments to be vigilant.
Also read:
- How law students are creating a reading culture in UP’s Bansa
- IIT Indore to broadcast maths, science lectures for Classes 6 to 8
Write to us at news@careers360.com .
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.
Featured News
]- Interest in MDI Gurgaon’s EMBA growing, attracts learners from across professions
- NTA Overhaul: 1,000 secure exam centres, biometrics to prevent fraud, question paper changes, suggests panel
- What changes in NEET UG? Experts’ panel suggests multi-stage exam, security overhaul, simpler process to NTA
- Use KVs, JNVs as NEET, JEE Main exam centres: High Level Committee on NTA
- Maharashtra cluster universities may now comprise only self-financed colleges; government tables Bill
- National Testing Agency exam count dropped by over 50% in 2024; lowest in 5 years
- NIOS Exams: Over 35,000 cheating cases reported since 2022, education ministry tells Lok Sabha
- South Asian University plans more online degrees, course, to start arts, management faculties
- ‘Take action’ on 22,298 unrecognised schools in UDISE Plus by March: Education ministry to states
- Study Abroad: Italy’s new student visa rules may cause delays for Indian student