Federal Ministry of Education yesterday said it has banned the
collection of development levies by the Parents Teachers Association,
PTA, in the Unity Colleges across the country in order to alleviate the
sufferings of parents.
The ban is with immediate effect.
In statement issued very late on Tuesday evening by the Ministry and
signed on behalf of the Minister by the Deputy Director ( Press) ,Ben
Bem Goong, in Abuja.
The Minister of Education, Malam Adamu Adamu said no Parent Teachers
Association (PTA) of any unity college is allowed to initiate any
development project in any of the unity colleges without the express or
written authorisation of the Federal Ministry of Education.
The statement reads ; “The new measures are aimed at arresting the
shocking trend where Development levies imposed on parents by PTAs are
becoming higher than the school fees charged by Government which
established the Unity Schools.
“Citing examples of PTA collections which have become higher than
school fees charged by Government, the Minister gave the examples of
Kings College Lagos, and Federal Science and Technical College Yaba
where the fees charged by Government for JSS1 in the first term is N69,
400.00, while the PTA collections stand at N70,000.00 and N74,000
respectively per child for the same first term.
This brings the total paid by parents in these two schools to
N139,400 and N143,400 respectively. With the reduction on development
levies and ban on charges for new projects as well as pegging of the
development levy to a maximum of N5,000, parents of JSS1 in these two
schools will now pay N88,000”.
While acknowledging the complementary roles played by parents and the
support provided by the PTA to the Colleges, the Education Minister
said he would not allow the PTAs to constitute themselves into a
Government within a Government at the level of Unity schools and at the
expense of parents.
According to the Minister, “Government views with grave concern the
activities of PTAs in Unity Colleges – which have even formed themselves
into National Associations, instead of limiting themselves to the
schools where their children attend.
“Running additional organisations such as NAPTAFEGC increases the
burden on parents who hardly differentiate between Government charges
and PTA levies”.
Malam Adamu Adamu described the existence of an umbrella body over the PTA as unnecessary, exploitative and unacceptable.
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