Delhi’s education department has revamped its website, and slipped in something that can matter to a lot of parents: A dedicated Fee Review Committee section where they can file fee-hike complaints online. So far, fee fights in Delhi have usually followed a familiar route. Parents get the circular, the WhatsApp groups become active, someone visits the school, then starts the letter exchange. Sometimes, the issue even ends up in court. The new fee review option in the website aims to bring this chaos into a system that can be tracked. There is a form on the site for Feedback Regarding School Fee Hike. If parents feel a school has raised fees unfairly, or without approvals, they can register their grievance there. The government is linking this to the Delhi School Education (Transparency in Fixation and Regulation of Fees) Rules, 2025. The Fee Review Committee that will look at these complaints is headed by retired Justice Anil Dev Singh. The other members include CA J S Kochar and R K Sharma, a former additional director of education. What changes with the website is access. Parents can submit complaints online, and in the revamped version, they can also track the status of what they have filed. There is also an option to email the committee chair through the portal.A significant feature of the website is the option to submit feedback anonymously. In many schools, families worry that direct confrontation can have their child get targeted later. The anonymity feature will reduce that fear, at least on paper.The site is also trying to do some quiet ‘context setting’. It hosts digital copies of key laws, including the older Delhi School Education Act and the newer fee regulation rules. It even references the long legal history around fee hikes, including the petition filed by Delhi Abhibhavak Mahasangh in the Delhi High Court and the court’s earlier directions on fee scrutiny. Well, this revamp is not only about fees. The education website now includes a daily attendance section for government schools. All 1,086 government schools are meant to upload attendance data every day. Early numbers show a large majority has already updated the records. This can improve accountability, but only if the data is clean and actually used.For students, the portal is also being positioned as a learning hub. It carries question banks, mock tests, workbooks, mental maths material, and CUET resources, especially for Classes 3 to 12.The Delhi government’s education website update is trying to formalise two sensitive areas: Fees and accountability. The real question is what happens after the first few thousand complaints come in. Will schools be pulled up quickly, or will parents just get an online acknowledgement and silence? That is where this story will go next.(With inputs from PTI)
