|
Chandigarh, Sep 22 : When former Punjab cabinet
minister Master Mohan Lal got his pension pay order from Chief Minister
Parkash Singh Badal, it was an achievement for teachers in privately
managed but government aided schools in Punjab.
Lal got his
cheque for as a retired social science teacher of the Arya Senior
Secondary School, Pathankot, before becoming the transport minister in
the previous government (2007-12) of Badal.
Teachers of private
schools, which are otherwise aided by the government, got their pension
scheme restored by the Badal government after a fight of almost nine
years.
The scheme was stopped by the Congress government of Amarinder Singh in May 2003, causing resentment among the teachers.
The
Badal government has restored the pensions with effect from June 1,
2003. Hundreds of teachers will benefit from the decision.
Education
Minister Sikander Singh Malooka said the payment of pension and arrears
would cost Rs.425 crore over a period of five years.
While Lal,
as a powerful figure of the ruling Shiromani Akali Dal-Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP), played an important role in getting the pension scheme
back for himself and other fellow teachers, their college counterparts
have not been so lucky.
Teachers of privately managed and
government aided colleges in Punjab have been fighting to get their own
pension scheme for over 25 years.
The Punjab and Chandigarh
College Teachers' Union (PCCTU), while welcoming the decision on school
teachers, has demanded that the pension be given to retired college
teachers too.
"The Punjab assembly had unanimously passed in
March 1999 an act to implement the retirement benefits to teachers of
aided colleges in Punjab on the pattern of aided schools. The pension
scheme approved by the Punjab cabinet on Dec 12, 2012 has still not been
implemented," said P.S. Gill, co-president of PCCTU.
With the Punjab government not implementing the pension scheme for college teachers, some have gone to court.
"It
is pitiable that among the top 20 states of the country, Punjab is the
only state which has not implemented the pension-gratuity scheme for the
staff of non-government aided colleges. Even Assam has extended the
benefits to the staff of government aided colleges," Gill said.
Over the years, college teachers have been forced to agitate for a pension scheme.
The privately managed colleges get 95 percent grant from the Punjab government under a grant-in scheme.
For
now, college teachers can only hope that they also get an influential
benefactor like Lal who can fight to get their demand implemented.
By Jaideep Sarin © IANS
|