Supreme Court Orders For School Safety
Supreme Court Orders For School Safety
Supreme Court Orders For School Safety
Petitioner
Respondents
Versus
Union of India & Others
JUDGMENT
Dalveer Bhandari, J.
1.
The fire
2
education guaranteed to all school going children under
Articles 21 and 21-A, the petitioner has prayed this Court to
bring about safer school conditions.
2.
3.
It took
3
thatched roof of the classrooms caught fire and the blazing
roof supported by bamboo poles collapsed on the school
children and most of them died on the spot.
4.
5.
supposed to visit these schools once every two years and issue
a stability certificate if the building is found to be in good
condition and all safety precautions are met.
The engineer
6.
4
kitchen close to the thatched classrooms.
had described the school as a death trap.
7.
8.
5
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
9.
10.
school
6
(i)
and distributing
them in
(ii)
(iii)
7
(iv)
(v)
response
plan
that
delineates
staff
training
the
staff
to
ensure
that
all
safety
(vi)
8
ensuring adherence to the highest safety standards by
the schools.
(ix)
libraries
and
outside
schools
relating
to
9
(x)
stipulated
safety
procedures
for
particular
(xi)
11.
10
all safety precautions are met.
Most of the
12.
11
measures in the schools.
13.
by the
Bureau
of Indian
Standards,
provides
detailed
Tables
standards
that
our
schools
could
follow.
In
the
12
proper planning of buildings, choice of proper
materials and components, electrical equipments
and making suitable provisions for fire detection
and suppression system.
15.
16.
The
schools
current
conditions,
because
much
work
13
remain.
schools
installed
safety
features,
it
emerges
that
Little
technical advice informs some of the plans, and few have any
admitted force of law or fail-safe or follow-up mechanism from
the State Government.
17.
With the
We will
14
sought later in this view.
18.
Codes before any may have the force of law. Some Building
Codes exist in law, but few states or municipalities have
enacted a standard as rigorous as the National Building Code.
Weak enforcement often then moots the enacted codes
effectiveness, no matter the Codes intent, whether fire safety
15
officials, routinely speak to the need for meaningful standards
with real enforcement.
19.
20.
Education
occupies
an
important
place
in
our
The
21.
16
advocated
that
elementary
education
should
be
both
22.
The un-
23.
The
24.
Education
occupies
sacred
place
within
our
17
Ors. (1993) 1 SCC 645, in which we established a right to
education.
26.
18
right. We have traced the broad scope of this right in R. D.
Upadhyay v. State of A.P. & Ors. AIR 2006 SC 1946,
holding that the State must provide education to all children
in all places, even in prisons, to the children of prisoners. We
have also affirmed the inviolability of the right to education.
In Election Commission of India v. St. Marys School &
Ors. (2008) 2 SCC 390, we refused to allow the State to take
teachers from the classroom to work in polling places. While
the democratic State has a mandate to conduct elections, the
mundane demands of instruction superseded the States need
to staff polling places. Indeed, the democratic State may never
reach its greatest potential without a citizenry sufficiently
educated
to understand
civil rights
19
27.
places a burden not only on the State, but also on the parent
or guardian of every child, and on the child herself. Article
21A, which reads as follows, places one obligation primarily
on the State:
The State shall provide free and compulsory
education to all children of the age of six to fourteen
years in such manner as the State may, by law,
determine.
28.
29.
The
20
a commensurate sacrifice of the States resources. The right
to education, then, is more than a human or fundamental
right. It is a reciprocal agreement between the State and the
family, and it places an affirmative burden on all participants
in our civil society.
30.
The right to
We
reached
similar
conclusion,
on
the
21
only recently in our opinion in Ashoka Kumar Thakur v.
Union of India & Ors. (2008) 6 SCC 1.
31.
Parents should
32.
22
33.
observed as under:
It has become necessary that the Government set a
realistic target within which it must fully implement
Article 21A regarding free and compulsory
education for the entire country. The Government
should suitably revise budget allocations for
education. The priorities have to be set correctly.
The most important fundamental right may be
Article 21A, which, in the larger interest of the
nation, must be fully implemented. Without Article
21A, the other fundamental rights are effectively
rendered meaningless.
Education stands above
other rights, as ones ability to enforce ones
fundamental rights flows from ones education.
This is ultimately why the judiciary must oversee
Government spending on free and compulsory
education.
34.
35.
23
minimum safety standards, in addition to the compliance of
the National Building Code of India, 2005, in particular Part
IV Fire & Life Safety and the Code of Practice of Fire Safety
in Educational Institutions (IS 14435:1997) of the Bureau of
Indian Standards. The said safety standards are enumerated
hereinbelow:
ii.
iii.
iv.
24
v.
be
constituted.
The
Fire
&
Rescue
vi.
vii.
long
bell
arrangement
in
case
of
emergency.
viii.
25
maintenance conducted by the School Management
in
consultation
with
the
Fire
and
Rescue
Department.
ix.
x.
26
ii.
iii.
in
approval
and
consultation
with
the
iv.
v.
in
collaboration
Department.
with
the
Fire
and
Rescue
27
3.3 SCHOOL BUILDING SPECIFICATIONS:
i.
ii.
in
single
storied
buildings
and
the
iii.
iv.
28
v.
vi.
vii.
viii.
29
ix.
by
the
Fire
and
Rescue
Services
to
the
School
as
mandatory
i.
officer
besides
the
educational
30
iii.
iv.
v.
31
36.
States
37.
The
of
Gujarat
has
established
such
an
emergency
32
other large issues, the State can focus on other aspects of
emergency management.
Some
38.
existing laws and encourage States in their own wellintentioned safety programmes. However, in the years since
the fire at the Lord Krishna Middle School, some States have
moved slowly and safety standards have varied in quality
across States.
33
millions more school children to danger from fire, earthquakes
and other causes, when simple enhancements could offer
much greater protection.
39.
The
40.
34
India, 2005 be implemented by all government and private
schools functioning in our country.
We direct that:(i)
Before
granting
recognition
or
affiliation,
the
secured
constructed
from
every
according
to
angle
the
and
they
safety
are
norms
(ii)
(iii)
35
(iv)
The safety
in
duty
must
attract
immediate
(v)
officials
of the
school
to
use
the
fire
extinguishing equipments.
41.
42.
this order.
36
.....J.
(Dalveer Bhandari)
New Delhi;
April 13, 2009.
....J.
(Lokeshwar Singh Panta)