Gujarat Government gets HC notice as schools file pleas on amended Act
Press Trust of India | June 22, 2021 | 09:00 AM IST | 2 mins read
The Act allows the government to decide conditions of appointment, promotion, and termination of employment of teaching and non-teaching staff of minority schools.
AHMEDABAD : The Gujarat High Court on Monday issued notice to the state government on a batch of petitions filed by various government-aided minority schools challenging an Act conferring powers on the state education board to appoint teachers and principals in such institutions. The division bench of Chief Justice Vikram Nath and Justice Biren Vaishnav issued notice to the state government and asked it to respond in three weeks.
These schools have challenged the Gujarat Secondary and Higher Secondary Education (Amendment) Act, 2021 that was notified on May 31, and which gives the state education board powers to provide for qualifications and methods of selection for non-teaching staff of registered private secondary and higher secondary schools, as well as conditions of appointment, promotion, and termination of employment of principal, teaching and non-teaching staff of such schools.
The amended Act also confers on the board the power to regulate the recruitment of non-teaching staff and allows the Gujarat State School Service Commission to select teachers and headmasters of registered government aided private secondary and higher secondary schools.
The petitioners have claimed that the amended Act takes away the right of the management to administer the institution, and the state, in the garb of' providing regulations and conditions, has completely transgressed on the rights of the minorities enshrined under the Constitution.
The pleas claimed the amendment to the Act was "unjustified and unlawful," and denies the fundamental right of the petitioners to achieve excellence and to administer its institution as per its requirements keeping in mind broad principles of the Constitution governing minority institutions.
The pleas said the amendment to the Act offends the protection conferred on minorities through Articles 29 and 30 of the Constitution, and sought the court's direction to prohibit the government from applying provisions of Sections 17 (26), 34 (2), and 35 of the principal Act on minority institutions.
The petitioners have also sought interim relief by way of a stay on the implementation of the amendment of the Act, and restrain authorities from proceeding on matters concerning selection of candidates till final disposal of the petition.
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.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- Student Protests: Odisha’s ‘model code of conduct’ for colleges, universities drawing flak from all quarters
- Another IIT, 5 DU colleges to launch ITEP courses in 2026 even as seats go vacant in top institutes
- Tamil Nadu Election 2026: Jobs, quality education,scholarships on the minds of voters, young and old
- Facing protest, Lady Hardinge blames Rs 30 lakh mess dues for bad food, says AC hostel proposal with govt
- Education ministry plans Rs 14 crore grants for Prime Minister Research Chairs, Rs 4-6.5 crore fellowships
- AMU detains most of BA LLB batch for low attendance; no records or time given, allege students
- NIT Kurukshetra students demand elected council, quick re-exams, counselling for teachers
- IIM Fees vs Placements: Soaring cost, stagnant salaries, students in debt
- Delhi University plans study-abroad programme for UG students, scholarships for some
- Hostel Life: Bad food, dirty toilets, sky-high fees – the truth about higher education’s crumbling backbone