The varsity will now route all its plans for disabled students through
a three-member core committee, including the EOC-PwD coordinator, and
a six-member
student executive body. (Express Photo by Sahil Walia)
PANJAB UNIVERSITY has finally launched a formal equal opportunity cell
for people with disabilities (EOC-PwD) on the lines of the SC/ST Cell.
Students
said they have been struggling for the past two years to get the cell
established as it exists in other top universities such as Delhi
University and
Jawaharlal Nehru
 University. According to the University Grants Commission (UGC)
guidelines, all universities and colleges should form an equal
opportunity cell for SC,
ST, OBC and PWD students. While the SC/ST Cell is already functioning
at PU, there was only an informal arrangement for disabled students
under the department
of lifelong learning. Now, the varsity will route all its plans for
disabled students through a three-member core committee, including the
EOC-PwD coordinator,
and a six-member student executive body.
http://indianexpress.com/article/education/after-two-years-of-students-struggle-pu-launches-formal-equal-opportunity-cell-for-the-disabled-5141888/
The cell was formed on April 3 after some PWD students and professors
met the authorities to discuss issues related to PWD students in the
university.
The Registrar, Dean, University Instructions (DUI), Dean, Students’
Welfare (DSW), SC/ST Cell Coordinator, Chairperson of the Department
of Lifelong Learning,
Chief Architect and a representative of the computer centre were
present during the meeting. The university has set up an online portal
eocpwd.puchd.ac.in
that will soon be updated with all the information on PWD students and
schemes available for them. The cell is located adjacent to the SC/ST
Cell in Aruna
Ranjit Chandra Hall.

“The authorities had already decided to launch the cell in December
2017. They informally appointed me in January, but now it has been set
up properly,”
said Prof Sanjeev Gautam, Coordinator, EOC-PwD. He added that his
first step was to collect data on all the disabled students from all
the departments
as there were 70 to 80 of them studying in the university. “A proforma
has been uploaded on the web portal where heads have to provide
details of disabled
students in their departments. This data will also be used to issue
identity cards for free e-rickshaw services. The last date for
submission is April
24,” he said.

The university has planned to make e-rickshaws free for
differently-abled students on the campus. The Chief Medical Officer
will certify the disability
and issue cards for availing the facility. Earlier, the service was
free only for disabled students of economically weaker section (EWS).
While the Panjab
University Campus Students’ Council (PUCSC) has repeatedly submitted
representations to the DSW to construct ramps and make e-rickshaws
free, PWD students
said it was only after the formation of the cell that the work on both
the projects started in the university. Now Karanbir Singh Randhawa,
Joint Secretary
of PUCSC, has submitted a representation demanding special walking
sticks for visually impaired students and 24×7 helpline during
examination.

“The DUI held a meeting with us on January 18 where we submitted an
application for a separate cell. An informal cell was formed in
October 2016, but that
did not comply with the UGC guidelines,” said Dheeraj Ahuja, a PhD
scholar who is a member of the student executive body of the EOC-PwD.
Students said
the former set-up did not have basic facilities such as its own office
and staff, a PWD coordinator and an executive body that could raise
issues being
faced by PWD students.

Rimpi Arora, a PhD scholar and student executive member, said PU was
90 per cent inaccessible for disabled students. While the construction
of ramps has
already started in areas near the Student Centre and AC Joshi Library,
students said it was not enough.

“We need tactile blocks for visually-impaired students and railings
for support along these ramps. Free e-rickshaw services are fine, but
none of it will
make sense if the campus is not made more accessible. Girls’ hostels
still have ramps and lifts, but boys’ hostels are in a pathetic
state,” said a visually
impaired student Manish Chauhan, also a student executive member.

Another student executive member, Shubham Sharma, said some of them
did not even want free commuting services if the campus was 100 per
cent accessible.
But, he added, providing these services was necessary as movement will
become impossible otherwise. The authorities said the foremost
priority is to make
the campus more accessible. The university has prepared plans to make
hostels and social spaces more disabled-friendly on the ground level.
“We’re first
looking at accessibility under which the new buildings already have
all the facilities. For older buildings, the chief architect has
formed plans to make
them accessible. We have also appointed the deputy registrar to
coordinate with the cell for better functioning. Right now, we’re
spending our own money,
but in time we will also look into proper allocation of funds,” said
Col G S Chadha (retd), Registrar, PU. Prof Gautam said it was great
that the university
had opened a proper channel of communication with PWD students to
address long-standing issues.

“While I don’t deny the role of the student council in raising issues
faced by disabled students, these can now be highlighted through a
formal platform.
Our PWD students have worked hard to sustain themselves on the campus
even without facilities and have constantly stood up for their
rights,” he added.


-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU




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