Darjeeling: The West Bengal School Service Commission
has validated the names of 137 ad hoc teachers at schools in the
Darjeeling hills, paving the way for the regularisation of their jobs.
The move has provided a huge fillip to Binay Tamang, who has
managed to meet the demands of 682 teachers with regard to their jobs in
a span of two months.
The names of the 137 teachers has been posted by the
commission on its website. "Recommendation letters for regularisation of
at under GTA of following candidates have been validated," the notice
states.
Following the clearance, the GTA and the district inspector of
schools will issue appointment letters to the 137 teachers, mostly
employed at secondary schools.
On January 20, Tamang, the chairman of the board of
administrators of the GTA, had handed approval letters to 429 secondary
teachers. These teachers had been appointed at various schools in 2010
by the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council but with the approval only from
the DGHC education secretary and not the district inspector of schools,
their post-retirement benefits were in doubt.
Prior to that, jobs of 16 other teachers had also been regularised.
"So far, we have managed to solve the problems of 682
teachers. We are now in the process of regularising the jobs of 503
voluntary teachers. We are also confident that 14 non-recognised schools
will be recognised shortly," Tamang said on Thursday.
"After these issues are solved, we are looking at regularising
the jobs of 241 other teachers in the hills. The GTA is focussed on
improving the education sector and we are confident that we can solve
the issues soon," said Tamang.
Issues related to regularisation of teachers had remained
unsolved right from the DGHC days. This is largely because the School
Service Commission (hills) had to be wounded up in the early 2000s after
those running the hill body then raised objections.
With no functional SSC, examinations to recruit teachers in
the hills were never conducted. The last examination was held in 1999.
As a result, management of respective schools and the GTA were
forced to fill up the vacancies through ad-hoc and voluntary teachers.
Ad hoc teachers receive a token monthly remuneration from the school
management but voluntary teachers do not. Some of the ad hoc teachers
receive some remuneration from the GTA also.
"The fact that the Binay camp of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha
has been able to solve some pending issues has sent out a positive
message in the hills," said an observer.
The Telegraph
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