The
Federal Government of Nigeria has banned the collection of development levies by
Parent-Teacher Associations (PTA) in the 104 Unity colleges.
The Federal Ministry of Education, in a statement, said the ban would take effect immediately.
The statement was signed by Bem Goong, deputy director of Press in the ministry.
“No 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 measures are aimed at arresting the
trend where development levies imposed on parents by PTAs are becoming
higher than the fees charged by government which established the
schools,’’ the ministry said.
It added that the Minister, Malam Adamu
Adamu, had noted excessive PTA levies in King’s College, Lagos, and
Federal Science and Technical College, Yaba, Lagos.
The mnistry said in the two schools,
fees charged for JSS1 in the first term was N69, 400, while the PTA
collection was N70,000 at Kings and N74,000 at Yaba.
“This brings the total paid by parents in these two schools to N139,400 and N143, 400.
“With the reduction on development
levies and ban on charges for new projects as well as pegging of the
development levy to N5,000, parents of JSS1 in these two schools will
pay N88, 000.
“I acknowledge the complementary roles
of parents and the support by the PTA to the colleges but I will 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,’’ the ministry quoted Adamu as saying.
It said Adamu expressed concern that
PTAs in Unity colleges had formed themselves into national associations
and said running additional organisations, such as National Parent and
TeachersAssociation of Federal Government Colleges (NAPTAFEGC),
increased the burden on parents.
NAPTAFEGC rejected an alleged 300 per cent increase in the fees of Unity schools.
Dr Gabriel Nnaji, national president of
NAPTAFEGC, told reporters that the alleged increase from N20,000 to N75,
000, was unacceptable.
He said an average parent with more than a child in Unity schools could not afford the cost.
But Adamu, on Tuesday, denied knowledge of the increment in fees.
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