PMO: Kodagu: Boy back in class after letter to PMO | Mysuru News – Times of India

Madikeri: A school in Kodagu has allegedly allowed a Class V boy to return to class after he was allegedly thrown from the library as his family had not paid full fees.
The boy Muthanna’s father has claimed that his son was allowed to return to class only after writing to the Prime Minister’s Office’s grievance redressal system. Muthanna, 10, is at Coorg Public School in Gonikoppal town of Kodagu district. The boy is studying here since first grade.
School and Muthanna’s father nawada beliyappa There are different versions regarding fees. When TOI sought its response from the school, it received an email. school wrote beliappa has “not paid school fees from 2020”. The school also said that they did not respond to “our request to pay the fees”. “False propaganda is being spread against the institution through social media,” the school said.
Businessman Beliappa has a different story to tell. he wrote to PMO The grievance redressal department said that his son was barred from entering his class with effect from November 30, 2021 for not paying his full fees. He claimed that he had paid Rs 40,000 in 2020-21 and Rs 60,000 in 2021-22.
He wrote that a member of the school staff “misbehaved” his son and said he was being asked to sit in the library because he had not paid his full fees. Belliappa, on the other hand, said that the school did not tell him anything despite his repeated inquiries. On December 1, demanding action from the PMO, he wrote, “My son cries most of the time.”
Belliappa told TOI that he had paid Rs 60,000 for 2021-22 following last year’s fee structure, but the school management had asked for Rs 1,10,000 as it was the new higher fee. “They increased the fee drastically in the midst of this covid crisis. I sent my objections over the excess amount by email which is not possible to pay. He did not respond to my appeal. Instead, they sent my son out of class and confined him to the library room. They demanded full payment of fees to allow him to attend classes,” Beliappa said. The father said that he had written to the PMO then.

,