Apologies for denigrating our great site with such dross, but I'm so
revolted by these self-righteous prigs that i succumb to posting this great
rebuttal by Sibal. Its not about the pay, indeed!

- ZestAlt Desk


*Why protest like unionists, Sibal asks IIT faculty *

**
Anita Joshua

   *‘Ministry not interfering with autonomy of IITs’ *



*Kapil Sibal *

NEW DELHI: Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal on Tuesday
questioned the rationale of IIT faculty protesting like “trade unionists”
against their revised pay scales.

“Pained” at their decision to observe a token fast on Thursday, he said the
Ministry was in no way trying to interfere with the autonomy of the Indian
Institutes of Technology as was made out by the faculty.

In a point-to-point rebuttal of the issues they raised, Mr. Sibal wanted to
know how the provision for a Ph.D with first class at the preceding degree
for the posts of Assistant Professor, Associate Professor and Professor
could be seen as an attempt to dilute merit or autonomy. Further, this was a
recommendation made by the Fifth Central Pay Commission.

As for the decision to set aside 10 per cent recruitments in a year at the
Assistant Professor level on contract for Ph.Ds from the IITs, Mr. Sibal
said this was part of the government’s effort to retain some of the IIT
products within the system.

Given the opposition to the move, he pointed out that individual IITs were
free to write to their boards for relaxation of this provision if they could
not meet the 10 per cent requirement.

Referring to the IIT faculty comparing their pay scales with that of
university and college teachers and those in certain government departments
such as Atomic Energy, the Ministry’s contention is that they were picking
and choosing only aspects that suited their argument.

“The fact is that an IIT faculty member can become an Associate Professor
within six years, while under the University Grants Commission scales, this
transition takes double the time,” Mr. Sibal said.

Defending the 40 per cent cap on the post of Professors at the grade of
Rs.12,000 per month, he said a new pay band had been created for senior
professors. The cap was much higher for the IITs than UGC institutions,
where 10 per cent of the sanctioned posts of professor were placed in the
senior grade. At the National Institutes of Technology, the cap was at 20
per cent, and the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences had a 25 per cent
cap on the senior professor grade.

Borrowing a line from the All-India IIT Faculty Federation that the “issue
is not just about a higher pay scale,” Mr. Sibal said: “I am happy that for
them, salary is not the issue.” Drawing attention to their earnings from
consultancies, he described their salary as the “icing on the cake,” adding
the actual teaching time was kept very low in the IITs to facilitate
research and consultancy work.

   **

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