Schools reopen in Jammu zone after two-week closure due to heavy rain and floods
Vikas Kumar Pandit | September 10, 2025 | 06:15 PM IST | 2 mins read
Students and teachers returned to classrooms with caution. Authorities directed schools to obtain structural safety certificates or submit undertakings before resuming offline academic activities in the region.
Schools in the Jammu zone reopened today, September 10 after being closed for the last two weeks due to heavy rain, floods, and landslides that began on August 26. The extreme weather caused loss of lives and significant damage to physical infrastructure in the region.
The Director of School Education, Jammu, has issued directives to ensure all safety measures are followed before resuming offline classes. According to the order, no offline classes shall commence in government or private schools till a valid structural safety certificate is issued by the competent authority.
"HOs and School Management Committees must evaluate the overall preparedness of their respective schools after obtaining the safety certificate," the official order said.
If a school is structurally safe and does not require a safety audit, the HOI or committee will have to submit an undertaking certifying the building’s safety. This undertaking should be submitted to the Chief Education Officer (CEO) or Zonal Education Officer (ZEO) before offline classes resume.
Also read BSEB Class 11 spot admissions 2025 deadline extended till September 12
Teachers, students resume academic activities
"Schools have reopened in the region today. They were shut down following the rain fury since the end of August," an official from the education department said. Some schools may remain closed due to damage , he added.
According to the PTI report, students welcomed the reopening, expressing enthusiasm to resume classes. Sunita, an eighth-grade student at a convent school, said, "We are happy to return to school and meet our friends. We are meeting our teachers again. Our education has suffered. Now we will focus more on completing the syllabus." Arvind from KC School said, "We are back to school. We love coming to school, meeting all our friends and teachers, and playing."
Teachers described the reopening as an opportunity to make up for lost time. "It was long-awaited to join back our schools and be with our students. We are happy to be here. We will work hard to make up for the loss of one fortnight," a teacher said.
(With inputs from PTI)
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
]UP CM Yogi Adityanath emphasises need for education system rooted in Indian values
Nanaji Deshmukh took the initiative from Gorakhpur to establish Saraswati Shishu Mandir institutions not merely to impart literacy but to ensure the holistic development of children, UP CM recalled.
Press Trust of India | 2 mins 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