Kerala: Cabinet approves draft bill to establish private universities
Press Trust of India | February 11, 2025 | 12:35 PM IST | 2 mins read
The bill mandates that 40 percent of seats in each course must be reserved for students from Kerala, following the state's existing reservation policy.
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: The Left government in Kerala on Monday approved a draft bill for the establishment and management of private universities in the state. The state Cabinet meeting chaired by Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan approved the Kerala State Private Universities (Establishment and Regulation) Draft Bill, 2025, under which only credible sponsoring agencies with experience in the education sector may apply to establish a private university in the state, a CMO release said here.
According to the draft bill, the university must own land as per the guidelines set by regulatory bodies and deposit a Rs 25 crore corpus fund in the state treasury. If it is a multi-campus university, the main campus must cover at least 10 acres. The university must also follow UGC and state government guidelines regarding faculty appointments , the selection of the Vice-Chancellor, and overall administration.
The bill mandates that 40 per cent of seats in each course must be reserved for students from Kerala, following the state's existing reservation policy. Additionally, scholarships and fee waivers for students from Scheduled Caste (SC) and Scheduled Tribe (ST) communities will continue.
A committee to review applications
Applicants seeking to establish a private university must submit a detailed project report along with the application fee. This report must include information about the university's land, funding sources, and management structure. A government-appointed expert committee will review the applications and submit its recommendations within two months.
Once approved, the university will be officially recognised through a law passed in the Legislative Assembly. Private universities will have the same rights and powers as public universities. The bill also states that the state government will not provide financial assistance to private universities, but they may apply for research grants.
Also read ‘Want only academics’: BJP-linked teachers’ body against new UGC regulations on VC appointment
Education secretary to ensure regulation
State Higher Education Secretary and another secretary nominated by the state government will be part of the university’s governing bodies to ensure proper regulation. The state government will have one nominee in the executive council and three nominees in the academic council of the private university . The democratic rights of students, teachers, and staff will be protected, and grievance redressal systems will be in place.
Additionally, employee benefits, including provident fund (PF), must be guaranteed. The Cabinet also approved amendments to university laws, removing the provision that allowed universities to set up study centres outside the state and abroad. To avoid administrative delays, existing syndicates, senates, and executive committees will continue until new ones are formed or their tenure ends.
A special provision will ensure a smooth transition in restructuring university bodies like academic councils and boards of studies. The amendments were included in a draft legislative memorandum and sent to the Law Department for further action, the CMO release added.
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
]- West Bengal: At this school, tradition meets innovation and education ‘extends beyond marks’
- NEET PG Counselling: 18 cancel admissions at a private medical college; Maharashtra CET Cell asks for probe
- TSBIE-BSET merger, B.Ed minimum for teaching; filling faculty posts: Telangana Education Commission blueprint
- What changes with AP Draft Coaching Rules? 5-hour cap, fee refunds, district panels with ‘civil court powers’
- Ekalavya Model Residential Schools: 229 sanctioned EMRS yet to open, budget slashed by up to 60%
- Azim Premji University files FIR against Kashmir event organisers; student council speaks up for them
- DU professors move High Court after Kalindi College ICC rules threats, lewd remarks don't count as harassment
- PM SHRI Schools: Leaking roofs, broken computers, mounting paperwork – and more visibility than depth
- ‘Before NEP made it policy, Bombay Cambridge School made it practice’
- ‘Hatred’ for Dalits: JNUSU ex-president moves National Commission for Scheduled Castes against JNU VC