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Updated Jun 2, 2026 · 12:55
West Bengal News Updated Jun 2, 2026

Bengal Education Dept Orders Audit Reports Within 30 Days, Bans Student Union Fees

The West Bengal Education Department has directed all state-run and aided colleges to submit audit reports within 30 days. Institutions without elected student unions must immediately stop collecting student union fees. The audit reports must detail funds collected as student union fees during the period without elected unions. This move is part of the BJP government's efforts to clean up the state's education system after the cash-for-school-job scam.

Bengal govt directs all state-run, aided colleges, universities to submit audit reports in 30 days

Kolkata, June 2

The West Bengal Education Department on Tuesday directed all state-run and government-aided colleges and universities in the state to submit their audit reports within the next 30 days.

The authorities of such colleges and universities, which do not have an elected students' union, have been asked to immediately stop charging "students' union fees" from students.

"Currently, there is no elected student union in any higher educational institution in the state. According to the rules, if there is no elected students' union in any state-run or state-union college or university, no funds or fees can be collected from the students as the 'student union fee'. But exactly this had been going on in all such colleges and universities for so long. Therefore, all state-run and state-aided colleges and universities have been instructed to immediately stop collecting 'student union fee', till the time elected students' unions are there," said a state education department official who refused to be named.

At the same time, he added, the authorities of such colleges and universities have been asked to mention in their respective audit reports the funds collected by them as "students' union fees" during the period when elected students' unions were not there and under which title the funds were spent.

It is learnt that the state education department has also cautioned the authorities of such colleges and universities about disciplinary action as per rules, in case the audit reports are not submitted within 30 days.

Academic circles believe that once these audit reports are filed and, subsequently compiled, there is a possibility of unearthing a financial scam in the education system in the state, which was severely tarnished during the previous Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress regime following the multi-crore cash-for-school-job case.

Since the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government in West Bengal led by Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari took charge, the focus has been on cleaning up the state's education system.

In the school education sector, similar reforms were initiated by the new state government earlier this month, when the state school education department announced new rules for elections of governing body members to free such bodies of political influence.

As per a blueprint worked out by the state school education department, all the governing body members will be inducted on an "election-basis" and not on a "selection-basis," which was practised during the previous Trinamool Congress regime.

The only exception will be for the post of governing body secretary, who by default is the headmaster or headmistress of the school concerned.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Good move by the state government. But I wonder why it took so long? Students were being charged fees for years without any elected unions. That's thousands of crores unaccounted for. The previous government should also be held accountable for turning a blind eye to this practice.

Michael C

Interesting development. As an outsider, it seems like India is serious about education reforms. The 30-day deadline is strict but necessary. Hope this isn't just a political move and actually leads to systemic change. Accountability matters everywhere.

Vikram M

As a professor in a state-run college, I can tell you this is long overdue. The "students' union fee" was a convenient slush fund for many administrators. The school governing body reforms are also welcome. No more political appointees running our educational institutions. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳

Sarah B

Sounds like a step in the right direction, but I'm skeptical about the implementation. Will the audit reports be made public? And what about the colleges that have already spent the money? Just submitting reports without action might not solve the problem.

Nikhil C

This is classic political drama. The BJP government is trying to score points by blaming the previous TMC regime. Instead of this, they should focus on improving actual quality of education. Our students are still struggling with outdated syllabi and lack of infrastructure. Audit is good, but not enough.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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