By : JACKSON LU
KENINGAU: Parents of
children in a school here are upset with the timing of the school decided to
make a collection for its development fees which was done during the
distribution of the government’s RM100 Special Contributions to school
children.
One of the parents
representing others who decided to bring the matter up to the media, Maria (not
her real name), 46, a single mother who works as a security guard, said the
timing of the school is a ‘paksaan secara halus’ (smooth forcing).
“Why did the school decided
to distribute the letter (referring to the RM50 fee collection letter) to us,
the parents, while the distributions of the RM100 Special Contributions was
underway in the same hall?
“We know that the school
board made a very careful method of not to directly cut the contribution from
the RM100 sum so that no one could accuse them of mishandling of allocations,
but it’s just the same as victimising parents and children,” she said.
Maria said, the fact that
parents were handed the ‘letter’, not once, but twice during the same event,
only shows how determined the school was to force parents to deduct half of
what the children get from the Special Contribution.
“When we first entered the
school hall for the ceremony, teachers at the entrance distribute the letter,
and for those like me, who had to get the RM100 in my child’s classroom, again,
the letter was handout personally to me there.
“In the classroom, they set
up a counter with two teachers and a student sitting attending to the
distribution of the contribution. After signing for the contribution, before
they hand us the money, they would hand out the letter, insisting that we pay
up there and then,” she said.
Maria said, however, as she
went to the ceremony without having any money, she almost decided to deduct
RM50 from the Special Contribution to pay up, but she decided not to, as the
money was intended solely for purchasing schooling items for her child.
“The school’s action is
ill-intended because they are taking advantage of the day that parents
receiving a contribution by the government. The fact that the school ask half
of what was given is also an indication of greed,” she said.
Meanwhile, a spokesperson of
SM Ken Hwa, Keningau told media that the Development Fee is intended to finance
costs of repairing damages on the school’s property such as leaking roofs,
damaged car parks, fences and so on.
He said, such fees are
collected annually, whereas in the previous years, about 99 percent of parents
pay up for the fees, and although it is expected that all parents should pay
up, it is not a compulsory.
However, when asked why the
collection of RM50 fees was done on the very same time where the RM100
contribution was distributed, the spokesperson refuse to give any comment.
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