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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, May 13, 2000 |
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Principals, lecturers brought under KESMA
By Our Special Correspondent
BANGALORE, MAY 12. The Government today brought within the
purview of the Karnataka Essential Services Maintenance Act
(KESMA) the principals, lecturers and office bearers of the
teaching and non-teaching staff association to end the boycott of
valuation of work of second year PU examination.
Warning the striking employees and those instigating them of the
consequences of the notification bringing them under the purview
of KESMA, the Minister for Primary and Secondary Education, Mr.
H. Vishwanath, said the valuation work would be completed at all
costs before June 5 by making alternative arrangements if the
teachers continued their boycott.
Mr. Vishwanath told presspersons that 18 valuation centres in
Bangalore, two in Mysore and one in Dharwad had been opened. But
he was yet to get information of those who had reported for work.
They would be kept open tomorrow and on Sunday to enable
valuators to carry out their work.
As an alternative measure, not only those who had been enrolled
for valuation work, but lecturers working in Government and aided
degree colleges, who had been teaching pre-university classes for
the last four years, had been permitted to report for valuation
work with an eligibility letter from the principals concerned,
even though they had not been enrolled for valuation work. They
would be enrolled on the spot, the minister said.
A list of lecturers working in unaided pre-university colleges,
who are eligible for valuation work had been sent to the deputy
directors of PU Education. Apart from this, those who retired
less than a year ago as pre-university teachers could report for
valuation work. All those reporting for valuation would be given
protection, he added.
According to Mr. Vishwanath, 11,000 teachers had been enrolled
for valuation work. The work should have commenced on April 18,
but for the boycott decision by teachers, who had demanded UGC
pay parity.
Mr. Vishwanath expected that at least 50 per cent of those
enrolled for valuation work would report at their respective
centres by Monday specially after an assurance of protection was
given to them. He made it clear that there was no question of
talks on the demands of teachers unless they reported for work
first. When his attention was drawn to the possibility of erratic
valuation by the ``disgruntled teachers, Mr. Vishwanath said the
sanctity of valuation would be safeguarded by the Government. He
said the time for admission to degree and other courses would be
extended suitably.
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