"One major reason for all this is the poor state of public schools. No one is addressing that issue. Those people (government) who can't administer a public school are trying to take over admissions of private schools.
"Please set your house in order. Then there would be no reason for people to rush to private schools," Justice Manmohan said.
He made the observation while issuing notice to the Delhi government and asking it to respond to the pleas by private schools seeking quashing of government's January 6 order scrapping 62 criteria, including management quota, for nursery admissions.
Such criteria, if being implemented by any private school for admissions, amounts to maladministration, the court said.
The court said the government cannot take away the
autonomy of private schools, especially by an office order which has not been passed under any statutory provision.
During the hearing, it also said that in its November 28, 2014 verdict scrapping the point system of nursery admissions devised by the Lt Governor for private unaided schools, it had told the government to amend the statute.
To this, Delhi government said it had asked schools to upload the criteria by December 8 last year but they did so by December end.
The court directed the government to file its response in a week and listed the matter for hearing on January 28.
The two associations, which represent a number of private unaided schools in the national capital, contended that the government cannot take away their autonomy with regard to nursery admissions when the same has been upheld by the high court and the Supreme Court.
The school bodies also contended that when the high court's earlier verdict had not been set aside, how can the government now come out with the January 6 order.
The pleas filed by the associations has sought quashing of the AAP government's decision to scrap management and other quotas, except for the Economically Weaker Sections (EWS) in the city's private schools, saying the "order is absolutely without jurisdiction and is thus, liable to be quashed".
Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal had on January 6 called the management quota the breeding ground for "biggest scandal" in the education sector and said his government will not be a "mute spectator" to it.
Earlier, the high court, in an order, had asked the Delhi government not to micro-manage the admission process following which Education Department had allowed the schools to frame their respective criteria and put them on their websites.
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