GURUGRAM: Members of the school safety committee on Thursday inspected the Bhondsi college where a Class 2 scholar was found along with his throat slit in September 2017, and favored the efforts taken by the control to boost safety features.
The district education officer, Ram Kumar, mentioned, "Everything in this school is perfectly fine. This school clearly passed the safety audit test." Agreeing with Kumar, Smriti Chabra, a member of the committee mentioned, "We inspected the school premises, including the washroom, and I found everything in order." The seven-year-boy was found within the college washroom along with his throat slit.
Since September, when the district administration took over the school for around three months, much work has been executed to ensure kids' safety within the college. Varghese Thankachan, safety officer of the school, mentioned, "When the incident happened, there were 16 CCTV cameras and now there are 82. One person has been employed by the school as CCTV operator to monitor the cameras. The backup of the CCTV footage remains with the school for 45 days. Police verification has been done of the entire school staff, from drivers, attendants, office staff to teachers. A metal detector has been installed at the entrance. All loopholes have been closed."
The workforce went from one magnificence to every other, and even searched the school buses to peer if the whole thing was advantageous. "The school buses have two cameras each. All the cameras are in working condition. At the same time, speedometer has been installed in all the buses," mentioned Sandeep Kumar, an RTA officer.
"Twenty-six women attendants accompany the students in school buses that have a GPS installed. Moreover, there are around 20 private school vehicles, hired by the parents, and the school has given all these private van drivers proper identity cards," Thankachan mentioned.
The district education officer, Ram Kumar, mentioned, "Everything in this school is perfectly fine. This school clearly passed the safety audit test." Agreeing with Kumar, Smriti Chabra, a member of the committee mentioned, "We inspected the school premises, including the washroom, and I found everything in order." The seven-year-boy was found within the college washroom along with his throat slit.
Since September, when the district administration took over the school for around three months, much work has been executed to ensure kids' safety within the college. Varghese Thankachan, safety officer of the school, mentioned, "When the incident happened, there were 16 CCTV cameras and now there are 82. One person has been employed by the school as CCTV operator to monitor the cameras. The backup of the CCTV footage remains with the school for 45 days. Police verification has been done of the entire school staff, from drivers, attendants, office staff to teachers. A metal detector has been installed at the entrance. All loopholes have been closed."
The workforce went from one magnificence to every other, and even searched the school buses to peer if the whole thing was advantageous. "The school buses have two cameras each. All the cameras are in working condition. At the same time, speedometer has been installed in all the buses," mentioned Sandeep Kumar, an RTA officer.
"Twenty-six women attendants accompany the students in school buses that have a GPS installed. Moreover, there are around 20 private school vehicles, hired by the parents, and the school has given all these private van drivers proper identity cards," Thankachan mentioned.
Safety thumbs up for school where 7-year-old was killed
Reviewed by Kailash
on
February 02, 2018
Rating: